Bitcoin (BTC) hash rate drops as miners shift capital to AI infrastructure

For the first time in six years, bitcoin hashrate, the total computing power that secures the network, fell during the first quarter. It is currently down about 4% year-to-date, hovering around 1 zettahash per share. second (ZH/s).

Over the past five years, the frequency has increased from around 100 exahashes per second (EH/s), a 10-fold increase, according to Glassnode data. Each year, the metric increased during the first quarter and ended with strong full-year growth of over 10%. By 2022, the number had almost doubled.

BTC Hashrate YoY (Glassnode)

AI Pivot

The 2026 shift reflects changing economics across the bitcoin mining sector. With production costs close to $90,000 per bitcoin and the spot price closer to $67,000, margins are negative. In response, many publicly traded miners are switching to artificial intelligence and high-performance computing infrastructure, where returns are higher and more predictable.

This transition is financed through debt issuance and bitcoin sales, reducing reinvestment in bitcoin mining. As a result, hash rate growth becomes more sensitive to the price of the cryptocurrency, with weaker prices likely to trigger further declines as smaller operators exit.

While a declining hashrate can raise concerns about network security, decentralization can mean more than absolute size. Publicly listed US miners have accounted for over 40% of the global hashrate, and a reduction in their influence could lead to a more geographically distributed network. In that sense, the current shift may ultimately support decentralization.

Despite the slowdown, CoinShares still predicts hashrate growth to around 1.8 ZH/s by the end of 2026, conditional on bitcoin recovering towards $100,000.

Read more: End of bitcoin ‘HODL’: public miners go all-in on AI, signaling more BTC selling

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