The landscape for bitcoin miners is becoming increasingly challenging, with rising operational costs and external geopolitical tensions compounding their struggles. A recent analysis by Checkonchain’s difficulty regression model estimated that the average production cost per bitcoin has soared to $88,000 as of March 13, while the cryptocurrency trades at approximately $69,200. This discrepancy creates a significant gap of nearly $19,000 per coin, leaving miners operating at a 21% loss on each block they produce.
The pressures on mining profitability have been accumulating since a severe market downturn in October, which saw bitcoin’s value plummet from $126,000 to below the $70,000 mark. However, the ongoing conflict in Iran has exacerbated the situation. As oil prices climb above $100 a barrel, electricity costs for mining operations are directly impacted, particularly for the estimated 8-10% of the global hashrate that relies on energy markets sensitive to supply disruptions in the Middle East. The Strait of Hormuz, a critical maritime passage for approximately 20% of the world’s oil and gas, is currently experiencing major disruptions, further complicating energy supply issues.
Recent geopolitical developments, including a string of threats from former U.S. President Donald Trump against Iran’s power infrastructure, have heightened the stakes for miners. The effects of this turmoil are already visible in the bitcoin network. On Saturday, the mining difficulty saw a significant drop of 7.76% to 133.79 trillion, marking the second-largest negative adjustment of 2026, trailing only February’s substantial 11.16% decline during Winter Storm Fern. Currently, this difficulty metric is nearly 10% lower than at the beginning of the year and far below the record high of close to 155 trillion seen in November 2025.
Additionally, the hashrate has decreased to approximately 920 EH/s, well beneath the record level of 1 zetahash achieved in 2025. The average block times have also lengthened, now stretching to 12 minutes and 36 seconds, significantly exceeding the intended 10-minute target.
In light of these challenges, hashprice—the revenue expected per unit of computational power—hovers around $33.30 per petahash per second per day, a figure that is dangerously close to breakeven for many mining operations and not far from the all-time low of $28 recorded on February 23. This financial strain forces miners to liquidate bitcoin holdings to cover operational costs, thereby increasing market supply at a time when about 43% of the total bitcoin supply is already trading at a loss, compounded by the activities of larger holders distributing their assets and the prevalence of leveraged trades affecting price stability.
In response to these economic pressures, publicly traded mining companies have begun diversifying their operations. Firms like Marathon Digital and Cipher Mining are expanding into artificial intelligence and high-performance computing, areas that provide more stable revenue streams compared to bitcoin mining amid current losses.
Looking ahead, the next scheduled difficulty adjustment is anticipated for early April, with projections indicating a further decline. If bitcoin remains below the critical threshold of $88,000 without any near-term indicators of recovery, the ongoing exodus of miners is expected to continue, leading to lower network difficulty. This self-correcting mechanism is designed to lower mining costs as participants exit the market. However, the window between when miners’ costs surpass their revenue and the necessary adjustments to restore profitability is rife with potential damage, both for individual miners and for the broader cryptocurrency market absorbing the impacts of their forced selling.


