Bitcoin Mining Revenue 2010–2026 — From $0 per Day to $50 Million per Day in 16 Years
Bitcoin mining revenue tells the story of the most remarkable economic transformation in the history of computing. In 2010, miners earned approximately $0.05 per block (50 BTC at $0.001/BTC) — meaning the entire Bitcoin mining network generated less than $10 per day. By Q1 2026, miners earn approximately $48–53 million per day (450 BTC in block rewards at ~$100,000 plus $3–8 million in transaction fees), making Bitcoin mining a $16+ billion annual industry that employs tens of thousands of people, consumes more electricity than many countries, and is publicly traded on major stock exchanges with a combined market capitalization exceeding $40 billion. The trajectory from hobby computing project to industrial-scale energy business — accomplished in less than two decades — has no parallel in economic history.
The defining feature of Bitcoin mining revenue is its dual dependency on price and supply schedule. Revenue is the product of two variables: the number of new BTC created per day (determined by the block reward, which halves every ~4 years) and the US dollar price of Bitcoin. Each of the four Bitcoin halving events has cut block reward revenue by 50% overnight, creating immediate economic stress for miners — but in every cycle, Bitcoin’s subsequent price appreciation has more than compensated for the reduced supply, driving total annual revenue to new highs within 12–18 months of each halving. The April 2024 halving reduced daily block creation from 900 BTC to 450 BTC, cutting nominal daily revenue from ~$57 million to ~$28.5 million at halving-day prices ($63,000). But as Bitcoin surged past $100,000 in late 2025, daily revenue recovered to $48–53 million — approaching and eventually exceeding pre-halving levels despite producing half as many new coins.
Bitcoin Annual Mining Revenue — 2010 to 2026
The bar chart below illustrates the dramatic growth of Bitcoin mining revenue over 16 years, from negligible amounts in 2010–2012 to over $13 billion in 2025. The pattern reveals the cyclical nature of mining economics: revenue surges during bull markets (2013, 2017, 2021, 2024–2025) and contracts sharply during bear markets (2014–2015, 2018–2019, 2022). The 2021 peak of $17.1 billion was driven by Bitcoin reaching $69,000 before the 2022 bear market (FTX collapse, Terra/Luna) collapsed revenue to $9.5 billion. The 2025 figure of $13.6 billion represents a post-halving recovery that confirms the historical pattern: each halving eventually leads to higher revenue than the previous cycle’s peak, even with reduced block rewards.
Bitcoin Mining Revenue by Year — Complete Historical Data 2010–2026
The following table presents the complete annual record of Bitcoin mining revenue, including total annual revenue, average monthly revenue, the prevailing block reward, average Bitcoin price, average daily revenue, and the fee percentage of total revenue. The data reveals the extraordinary growth trajectory — from $3,300 in total 2010 revenue to $13.6 billion in 2025 — as well as the increasing importance of transaction fees as block rewards decline through successive halvings. Revenue growth has been driven by Bitcoin’s price appreciation outpacing the halving-induced reduction in new coin creation, a dynamic that is central to the broader global cryptocurrency market’s $3.8 trillion ecosystem and its structural evolution.
| Year | Annual Revenue | Monthly Avg | Block Reward | Avg BTC Price | Avg Daily Rev | Fee % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | $3.3K | $275 | 50 BTC | $0.06 | $9 | <1% |
| 2011 | $160K | $13K | 50 BTC | $5.27 | $438 | <1% |
| 2012 | $43M | $3.6M | 50→25 BTC | $7.50 | $118K | 0.5% |
| 2013 | $260M | $22M | 25 BTC | $200 | $712K | 0.3% |
| 2014 | $580M | $48M | 25 BTC | $530 | $1.6M | 0.5% |
| 2015 | $380M | $32M | 25 BTC | $280 | $1.0M | 0.8% |
| 2016 | $580M | $48M | 25→12.5 BTC | $550 | $1.6M | 2% |
| 2017 | $3.2B | $267M | 12.5 BTC | $4,000 | $8.8M | 8% |
| 2018 | $5.2B | $433M | 12.5 BTC | $7,500 | $14.2M | 3% |
| 2019 | $5.0B | $417M | 12.5 BTC | $7,200 | $13.7M | 2.5% |
| 2020 | $5.5B | $458M | 12.5→6.25 BTC | $11,000 | $15.1M | 3.5% |
| 2021 | $17.1B | $1.43B | 6.25 BTC | $47,000 | $46.8M | 3% |
| 2022 | $9.5B | $792M | 6.25 BTC | $28,000 | $26.0M | 1.5% |
| 2023 | $10.3B | $858M | 6.25 BTC | $30,000 | $28.2M | 4% |
| 2024 | $12.5B | $1.04B | 6.25→3.125 BTC | $63,000 | $34.2M | 12% |
| 2025 | $13.6B | $1.13B | 3.125 BTC | $95,000 | $37.3M | 15% |
| 2026* | ~$16B* | ~$1.33B* | 3.125 BTC | ~$100K | ~$44M | ~13% |
Monthly Mining Revenue Trend — 2020 to 2026
The line chart below tracks Bitcoin's monthly mining revenue from 2020 to 2026, showing the dramatic cyclicality driven by Bitcoin's price movements and the April 2024 halving. The gold line represents total monthly revenue (block rewards + fees), while the blue line isolates the transaction fee component. The visible spike in fee revenue during April 2024 (Runes protocol launch) and early 2024 (Ordinals/BRC-20 boom) illustrates the emerging importance of transaction fees as block rewards decline through successive halvings.
The Two Sources of Mining Revenue — Block Rewards and Transaction Fees
Bitcoin mining revenue comes from exactly two sources: block rewards (newly created Bitcoin paid to the miner who successfully adds a block to the blockchain) and transaction fees (fees paid by users to have their transactions included in blocks). Historically, block rewards have dominated mining revenue, accounting for 95–99% of total income in early years. However, as successive halvings reduce the block reward, transaction fees are becoming an increasingly critical revenue component. In 2024, this dynamic shifted dramatically: during the Ordinals/BRC-20 inscription boom (January–March 2024) and the Runes protocol launch (April 20, 2024 — the day after the halving), transaction fees spiked to 50–75% of total block revenue for multiple days, temporarily exceeding the block reward itself. On April 20, 2024, miners earned approximately $80 million in a single day — with $50 million from fees alone — the highest single-day fee revenue in Bitcoin’s history. Average fee share has settled to approximately 8–15% of total revenue in 2025–2026, but the Ordinals-driven fee spikes demonstrated that the Bitcoin fee market can generate meaningful revenue at scale.
Network Hashrate and Mining Difficulty — 750 EH/s and the Most Powerful Computing Network in History
Bitcoin’s network hashrate — the total computational power dedicated to mining — has grown from approximately 8 MH/s when Satoshi Nakamoto’s CPU was the sole miner in January 2009 to over 750 exahashes per second (EH/s) in Q1 2026. This represents a factor of approximately 1017 increase (100 quadrillion times) in 17 years — making the Bitcoin mining network the most powerful computing network in human history by any measure. The hashrate is a direct function of mining profitability: when revenue per hash increases (due to BTC price appreciation), miners deploy more hardware, increasing hashrate; when revenue falls (due to halvings or price declines), marginal miners shut down, reducing hashrate. This self-regulating mechanism ensures that mining remains competitive while maintaining the approximately 10-minute target block interval through automatic difficulty adjustments every 2,016 blocks (~2 weeks).
Network Hashrate Growth by Year — 2015–2026
The Cost to Mine One Bitcoin in 2026 — $40,000 to $85,000 Depending on Efficiency
The profitability of Bitcoin mining is determined by the relationship between revenue per hash (“hashprice”) and cost per hash, which is primarily a function of electricity cost, hardware efficiency, and operational overhead. In Q1 2026, the all-in cost to mine one Bitcoin ranges from approximately $40,000 for the most efficient operations (latest-gen ASICs, $0.03–0.04/kWh electricity in hydro-rich regions like Quebec, Scandinavia, or Paraguay) to $85,000+ for marginal miners ($0.08+/kWh electricity, older-gen hardware). With Bitcoin trading at $95,000–$105,000, the mining industry is broadly profitable — but the margin structure varies enormously by operator. The relationship between mining profitability and electricity costs underscores the direct link between Bitcoin mining economics and US and global energy price dynamics, where miners function as flexible, price-sensitive industrial consumers that can relocate to the lowest-cost power sources globally.
“Hashprice” measures the revenue earned per terahash of computing power per day, providing a universal metric for mining profitability regardless of operation size. In Q1 2026, hashprice averages $48–55/TH/day — down from ~$80/TH/day pre-halving but above the ~$38 post-halving low. For context: a Bitmain Antminer S21 Pro (234 TH/s, $0.05/kWh electricity) earns approximately $11,200–12,900/month in gross revenue against ~$3,200/month in electricity costs, yielding a ~70% gross margin. This margin compresses rapidly at higher electricity costs: at $0.08/kWh, the same machine’s electricity cost rises to $5,100/month, reducing gross margin to ~55%.
Top Public Bitcoin Mining Companies by Hashrate and Revenue — Q1 2026
The Bitcoin mining industry has consolidated significantly since the 2022 bear market, with publicly traded miners capturing an increasing share of total network hashrate. The top eight public miners collectively operate approximately 143 EH/s — representing approximately 19% of total network hashrate. These companies have combined market capitalizations exceeding $40 billion, employ thousands of workers, and in several cases have diversified into high-performance computing (HPC) and AI data center hosting — leveraging their existing power infrastructure and cooling capabilities. The market valuations of these mining companies — and their comparison to other publicly traded enterprises — can be contextualized through analysis of the world’s most valuable companies by market capitalization.
Top Public Bitcoin Miners by Self-Mining Hashrate — Q1 2026
How Each Bitcoin Halving Has Reshaped Mining Revenue
Each of the four Bitcoin halvings has followed a remarkably consistent pattern in its impact on mining revenue: an immediate 50% revenue cut on halving day, followed by a 3–6 month consolidation where marginal miners exit and hashrate temporarily declines, followed by a 12–18 month recovery as Bitcoin’s price appreciates sufficiently to not only restore pre-halving revenue levels but exceed them, setting new all-time highs. The 2012 halving (50→25 BTC) saw daily revenue drop from ~$100K to ~$50K before recovering to over $1M/day within 12 months. The 2016 halving (25→12.5 BTC) saw revenue drop from ~$1.8M to ~$900K/day before recovering to $25M+/day during the 2017 bull run. The 2020 halving (12.5→6.25 BTC) reduced revenue from ~$13M to ~$6.5M/day before recovery to $60M+/day in late 2021. The April 2024 halving (6.25→3.125 BTC) cut revenue from ~$57M to ~$28.5M/day, with recovery to $50M+/day by late 2025 as Bitcoin surpassed $100,000. The detailed mechanics of these halving events and their price impact are analyzed comprehensively in dedicated coverage of all four Bitcoin halving events and their historical price cycle patterns.
Where Bitcoin Is Mined — Geographic Distribution and Energy Sources
The geographic distribution of Bitcoin mining has undergone a dramatic transformation since China’s comprehensive mining ban in June 2021 — which eliminated approximately 65% of global hashrate overnight. By Q1 2026, the United States dominates with approximately 35–38% of global hashrate, concentrated in Texas (cheap natural gas and deregulated grid), Georgia, New York, Kentucky, and Wyoming. Kazakhstan briefly surged to second place post-China ban but has declined due to regulatory crackdowns and grid instability, now accounting for approximately 6–8%. Russia represents approximately 12–15% (concentrated in Siberian hydroelectric regions), Canada 6–8% (Quebec and Alberta), and the UAE and Middle East are the fastest-growing mining regions at approximately 4–6%, leveraging stranded natural gas and sovereign wealth fund investment. The institutional transformation of mining has attracted investment from the world’s largest asset managers, including BlackRock and other major financial institutions that hold significant positions in publicly traded mining companies through their ETF and index fund products.
Bitcoin Mining Revenue Breakdown by Source — 2025
Bitcoin Mining Revenue Outlook — Scenarios Through the 2028 Fifth Halving
The trajectory of Bitcoin mining revenue through the 2028 fifth halving (reward reduction from 3.125 to 1.5625 BTC) will depend on the interplay between Bitcoin’s price trajectory, transaction fee market development, hashrate growth, and hardware efficiency improvements. The bull case projects annual mining revenue exceeding $20 billion by 2027 if Bitcoin reaches $150,000–$200,000 and fees stabilize at 10–15% of total revenue. The base case projects $12–16 billion annually through 2027, declining temporarily to $8–10 billion immediately after the 2028 halving before recovering. The bear case — a crypto winter scenario with BTC falling below $50,000 — could compress annual revenue to $5–7 billion, forcing significant miner consolidation.
Frequently Asked Questions — Bitcoin Mining Revenue
Approximately $1.0–1.5 billion per month in Q1 2026. Daily revenue averages $48–53 million from block rewards (~$45M) and transaction fees (~$3–8M). At $100K BTC, annual revenue is tracking at approximately $16 billion.
$13.6 billion — the highest annual mining revenue ever, despite the April 2024 halving cutting block rewards by 50%. Bitcoin’s price surge from $63K to $108K more than compensated for reduced supply. Transaction fees contributed ~$2.1B (15%).
Transaction fees contributed ~15% of 2025 revenue ($2.1B of $13.6B). During peak periods (Ordinals, Runes launch), fees exceeded 50–75% of block revenue. The record single-day fee was $50M on April 20, 2024. Fee share is increasing as halvings reduce block rewards.
All-in cost ranges from $40,000 (most efficient) to $85,000+ (marginal miners). Key variables: electricity ($0.03–0.08+/kWh), ASIC efficiency (15–25 J/TH), and operational overhead. At $100K BTC, most miners are profitable with varying margins.
Higher hashrate = more competition for fixed rewards. Key metric: hashprice ($48–55/TH/day in Q1 2026). Despite 750+ EH/s record hashrate, total revenue is also at records because BTC price increase outweighs hashrate dilution.
US leads (35–38%), followed by Russia (12–15%), Kazakhstan (6–8%), Canada (6–8%), and UAE/Middle East (4–6%). China dropped from 65% to ~0% after its 2021 ban. Mining follows cheapest electricity globally.
Long-term security requires fees to replace block rewards. After 2028 halving, block rewards = ~$22.5M/day at $100K BTC. If fees avg $5–10M/day (proven feasible from 2024 spikes), total $27–32M/day can sustain current hashrate. Ordinals, Runes, and L2 fee demand provide pathways.
Primary: Blockchain.com — Total Bitcoin Miner Revenue
Primary: Glassnode — On-Chain Miner Revenue & Fee Analytics
Primary: Hashrate Index — Hashprice, Hashrate, Mining Economics
Additional: CoinMetrics · Mempool.space · Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index (CBECI) · Luxor Technologies · CoinShares Mining Report · Marathon Digital, CleanSpark, Riot Platforms SEC Filings (10-K/10-Q)
