According to Galaxy Research, Bitcoin mining difficulty has fallen about 18.5% from its peak in one of the largest drops since 2021's "China ban," which saw a crackdown on the industry.
According to a miner capitulation chart accompanying Galaxy's research tweet, the difficulty drawdown during 2021's "China ban" was 45% and 32% during the 2018 bear market.
Bitcoin mining difficulty is -18.5% from its peak, the biggest such drawdown since the 2021 "China ban"
— Galaxy Research (@glxyresearch) July 17, 2026
The difficulty adjustment allows the network to maintain a ~10min target block time despite fluctuations up or down in hashrate pic.twitter.com/URe7HqECdl
Bitcoin's difficulty adjustment allows the network to maintain about a 10-minute target block time despite fluctuations up or down in hashrate. The recent decline in difficulty coincides with a drop in prices, with Bitcoin extending months of selling.
Bitcoin's price is currently down 50.38% from its October 2025 ATH of $126,198 as it trades around $62,000. This has resulted in several miners shutting down, especially those with older equipment coupled with high energy costs. Some have also redirected their hardware to focus on artificial intelligence (AI), as megacap firms offer stable contracts and often economically irresistible terms. This led to a significant drop in the number of active machines securing the Bitcoin network, with mining difficulty consequently dropping.
Bitcoin news
The crypto market saw fresh selling pressure on Friday as AI stocks fell, weighing on sentiment. However, a technical indicator suggests oversold conditions heading into the weekend.
$BTC, the largest cryptocurrency by market cap, fell below $63,000 to a low of $62,452 early Friday, extending its drop from Wednesday's high of $65,559 into a third day. At the time of writing, $BTC was down 1.93% in the last 24 hours to $63,133 and down 1.83% weekly. Bitcoin subsequently fell below its 50-day simple moving average, currently at $63,899, a widely tracked gauge of near-term momentum.
In the last 24 hours, overall volume has risen about 9% to $172.44 billion across the broader crypto market, according to CoinGlass data, while open interest (OI) held steady at around $111 billion. This suggests increased activity in the market, with Bitcoin open interest rising slightly by 0.02% in the last 24 hours to $47.85 billion.