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RESEARCHBitcoin

Bitcoin Miner Economics After the 2024 Halving: A Framework

The halving cut the block subsidy in half. Here is how to reason about miner revenue, hashprice, and the pressures that shape post-halving mining.

Research and analysis for information only — not investment advice.
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Bitcoin Miner Economics After the 2024 Halving: A Framework

Key findings

  • The 2024 halving reduced the block subsidy from 6.25 to 3.125 BTC, roughly halving the issuance portion of miner revenue overnight.
  • Miner revenue is subsidy plus fees; as the subsidy declines across cycles, fee revenue becomes structurally more important to security economics.
  • Difficulty adjusts about every two weeks to target ten-minute blocks, so sustained margin compression tends to push out higher-cost hashpower rather than change issuance.

Background

Every 210,000 blocks — about every four years — Bitcoin halves the block subsidy paid to miners. In 2024 that subsidy fell from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC. Since the subsidy is the larger part of miner revenue in most conditions, a halving is an abrupt shock to the industry’s top line, absorbed over the following months.

Data & method

Data: block subsidy and difficulty-adjustment rules from the Bitcoin consensus code; revenue = subsidy + transaction fees. Method: reason about hashprice (revenue per unit of hashrate) as the variable that clears the mining market. Limitation: we deliberately avoid asserting a specific current hashprice or price level, which are time-sensitive; see live data instead.

Analysis

Miner revenue has two components: the subsidy and transaction fees. Post-halving, the subsidy portion is mechanically smaller, so at a constant price and fee level, revenue per unit of hashrate falls. The network’s response runs through difficulty: it re-targets roughly every two weeks to keep blocks near ten minutes apart. If margins compress, the highest-cost miners power down, hashrate falls, and difficulty eventually eases — restoring margin for the survivors. Issuance itself does not change; the security budget adjusts through who is mining, not how much is minted.

Risks & limitations

Long-run security economics depend on fees replacing the shrinking subsidy. Whether fee markets mature enough to sustain security across future halvings is a genuine open question, not a settled fact — we flag it as such. Miner-behavior inferences from on-chain flows are indirect.

What to watch

The ratio of fee revenue to subsidy across cycles is the structural variable worth tracking. For how miner selling fits the broader picture, see reading on-chain accumulation vs distribution.

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Position disclosure

The BlackPearlBitcoin Research Desk holds no positions relevant to this report. See our conflict-of-interest policy in the methodology.

BlackPearlBitcoin Research Desk

Independent institutional crypto research — primary-sourced, dated, method-explicit, and human-written. We disclose positions, correct openly, and license our work for citation. About the desk →

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