Mining Difficulty
Mining difficulty is a measure of how hard it is to find a valid block hash. The Bitcoin network adjusts it every 2,016 blocks to keep block times near 10 minutes.
Definition
Mining difficulty is a numerical value that controls how hard it is to find a hash that satisfies Bitcoin’s proof of work requirement. It rises as more hash power joins the network and falls as miners leave.
How the Adjustment Works
Bitcoin recalculates difficulty every 2,016 blocks — roughly every two weeks. The protocol compares actual block production to the target of one block every 10 minutes:
- If blocks came faster than 10 min on average → difficulty increases
- If blocks came slower than 10 min on average → difficulty decreases
Adjustments are capped at 4× up or down per period to prevent extreme swings.
Why It Matters
The difficulty adjustment is what makes Bitcoin’s monetary policy predictable. No matter how much mining hardware comes online, blocks (and therefore new bitcoin issuance) arrive at the same average pace.
It also enforces a kind of equilibrium:
- Rising prices → more miners → higher difficulty → marginal miners squeezed out
- Falling prices → miners leave → difficulty drops → remaining miners earn more per unit of hash
Difficulty vs. Target
The target is the actual hash threshold a block header must beat. Difficulty is just a human-friendly way to express it: a difficulty of 1 corresponds to the highest possible target; higher difficulty = lower target = harder to find a valid hash.