Slower block times and weak hashprice signal declining miner activity, pointing to a potential 14% difficulty cut.
Bitcoin mining is losing momentum as block times rise and profitability drops. Lower hashrate and a shift toward AI infrastructure are reducing network participation. These conditions are setting up a notable difficulty adjustment with current data pointing to a potential 14% drop.

Mining conditions across the Bitcoin network have remained uneven this year, with difficulty adjustments moving in both directions. A total of 7 difficulty adjustments have been recorded, including 3 increases and 4 decreases.
Two weeks ago, the network posted a notable reduction, following earlier gains of 14.73% and 0.45% in the previous cycles. Despite that recent drop, overall difficulty is still 3.87% higher.
Image Source: Hashrate Index
Therefore, mining a block remains more challenging than before, with current levels about 138.97 trillion times higher than Bitcoin’s launch conditions.
As of April 5, miners had produced 304 out of 2,016 blocks, placing the network roughly 9% toward the next scheduled update on April 18, 2026. While conditions can shift as more blocks are mined, early estimates point to a potential 14.27% decrease in difficulty.
Furthermore, block production has slowed notably in recent sessions. Average block time has climbed to 11 minutes and 39 seconds, well above the 10-minute target. That slowdown suggests a drop in hashrate or reduced mining participation.
Falling miner revenue is a key reason behind the slowdown. Daily hashprice is around $30.67 per PH/s, one of the lowest levels seen in years. With earnings under pressure, some miners are rethinking where to commit resources.
In many cases, operators are shifting toward AI-related infrastructure, where returns are currently higher. Meanwhile, transaction fees provide little support accounting for only 0.56% of total block rewards. That subsidy will reduce over time, adding more pressure.
With 106,335 blocks left until the next halving, profit margins remain tight. The Bitcoin difficulty adjustment serves as a built-in stabilizer.
As miners exit and the total hashrate declines, the network reduces difficulty. That shift makes block production easier and helps restore balance. Early signals indicate this adjustment process may already be in motion.
The post BTC Mining Difficulty Faces Sharp Adjustment as Network Signals 14% Decline appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.


