Bitcoin Production Cost To Rise 9% By Q2’s End
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The median cost of mining a single Bitcoin is estimated to have climbed above $70,000 in the second quarter as miners navigate a rise in network hashrate and energy prices. According to a report on Monday from Bitcoin mining research firm TheMinerMag, the median cost of producing Bitcoin (BTC) already rose from $52,000 in the last quarter of 2024 to $64,000 in Q1 2025. This is expected to increase by over 9% in Q2. “Direct production costs are expected to surpass $70,000 in the current quarter,” TheMinerMag said in its May/June industry update. The implied cost of Bitcoin production by company. Source: TheMinerMag Bitcoin’s rising price is giving miners breathing room A rise to $70,000 would mark a near 9.4% increase, potentially pressuring less efficient Bitcoin miners as their profit margins shrink. With Bitcoin trading at around $107,635, most miners still have a sufficient buffer — though the production cost estimates don’t include the depreciating value of the mining rigs and factors in Bitcoin earned from machines that are rented out to clients, among other things. Keeping fleet costs low is a top priority With mining production costs on the rise, public companies have been focused on keeping their operations as efficient as possible, particularly when it comes to their fleet hashcost — the cost of computing power to mine Bitcoin — TheMinerMag noted. In Q1, the median fleet hashcost from public miners held steady at approximately $34 per petahash per second (PH/s). However, some firms, including Terawulf and Bitdeer, saw production costs rise by over 25%, according to the report. Terawulf said the increase was primarily due to rising energy costs, which spiked to $0.081 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) in Q1, nearly double the $0.041 per kWh reported in Q1 2024. Mining stocks split as investors reward revenue diversification Meanwhile,…