Bitcoin Transactions Are More Expensive Than Ever
The all-time high in fees coincides with a perfect storm of all-time highs in difficulty and block demand.
Bitcoin’s average transaction fees have well surpassed all-time highs as miner outages in China have slowed block production at a time when demand for block space has never been greater.
Per multiple sources, the average fee is roughly $59. In 2017, during the peak of bitcoin’s (BTC) last bull market, average transaction fees just tapped $50.

These high transaction fees coincide with a series of accidents at Chinese coal mines which have taken mining farms in the coal-rich regions of China offline. Bitcoin’s hashrate has fallen some 25% to 125 exahashes a second, according to mining pool-reported data.
“This is a combination of ASIC shortages, huge price increases of BTC outpacing difficulty and the sudden hashrate drop, resulting in slower block times, backlog of transactions and extra fees per block,” Compass Mining Chief Business Officer Thomas Heller told CoinDesk.
Read more: A Guide to Saving on Bitcoin’s High Transaction Fees
The effect of hashrate on Bitcoin transactions
With as much as a quarter or more of bitcoin’s hashrate reduced and Bitcoin’s mining difficulty at an all-time high, blocks are coming in at a slow and scattered pace, with multiple blocks taking an hour or more to be mined. (One block took two hours, an incredibly rare occurrence).
It has been over an hour since a block was confirmed.
— 🏔Adam O🏔 (@denverbitcoin) April 21, 2021
The odds of this (considering current average block time over the last 2016 blocks is about 11:55) are quite low.
Mempool is gonna be thicc. pic.twitter.com/7Zk2XqlLk9
At this rate, Bitcoin’s mining difficulty will probably adjust in the first few days of May. This self-correcting score manages how hard or easy it is for miners to find the next block in Bitcoin’s blockchain, and it typically changes every two weeks (or more accurately, after every 2,016 blocks).
Read more: How Do Bitcoin Transactions Work?
Bitcoin can only adjust its difficulty by 25% each retargeting period, but estimates suggest Bitcoin is due for a 30% adjustment to correct for the drop in hashrate (which would imply more than one downward adjustment ahead, assuming more hashrate doesn’t come online). If the affected miners come online before the next difficulty adjustment, the correction wouldn’t be as severe.
“We are expecting to hear more information in the coming days in regards to the timelines for coming back online. If things progress smoothly then it's possible the machines could be online by the weekend,” Heller said. But “most Xinjiang miners are waiting it out,” he continued, to migrate their machines to Sichuan in anticipation of China’s rainy season.
Miners from F2Pool told CoinDesk they didn’t know for certain when these miners would be online.
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