Based on the latest data, Bitcoin mining revenue is a sliding type marked by sharp price fluctuations. Hash Pris – The expected return of Petahash (PH/s) per second per second every day is below 7.61%, which was standing on July 27th.
Hashrate is resilient as block times speed up before the next difficulty hike predicted on September 5th
The difficulty of mining Bitcoin is currently 129.7 trillion, and five days ago it rose 0.20% at block height of 911232. This increase slowed miners to quickly find blocks while revenues fell, but the network hashrate remains at 965.77 exaf (EH/s) on August 27th (EH/s).

Source: HashrateIndex.com
Miners are keeping their paces stable, so the blocks are processed faster, with average block time sitting close to 9 minutes and 37 seconds as of 9am on Wednesday. The next difficulty adjustment is expected in the approximately 1,300 blocks landing around September 5, 2025, with an increase of +3.93%, but could shift very well before that.

Source: HashrateIndex.com
The expected return from revenue, or Petahash per second (PH/s) per second (PH/s) of Bitcoin’s computing power, is currently $54.30 per output of 1 pH/s. Thirty days ago, Hashpris was $58.77 per Ph/s, with miners down 7.61% over the past month. Still, today’s levels are slightly above the recent low of $53.44.
The current trajectory highlights how miners’ resilience continues to shape Bitcoin’s network dynamics, and how profitability pressures and stable hashrate contributions. Most of it could be due to super-efficient machines. As conditions evolve, the interaction of cost, reward, and computing power will remain central to the long-term stability and growth of the Bitcoin network.