Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Drops 2.6% in January 2026, Easing Miner Pressure

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Bitcoin news broke on January 2026 as mining difficulty fell 2.6%, easing miner pressure with BTC trading near $91,000. On-chain analyst Darkfost said lower difficulty cuts selling pressure from miners. The adjustment reversed a year of rising difficulty that squeezed margins as prices dropped. Bitcoin analysis shows the price remains range-bound between $89,000 and $94,000.

Bitcoin’s mining difficulty began to fall in early January 2026, easing pressure on miners just as BTC continued to trade below the closely watched $100,000 level.

The shift matters because miners remain one of the market’s largest natural sellers, and any relief on their margins can help steady price action during periods of consolidation.

This latest adjustment comes with Bitcoin hovering around $91,000, following weeks of tight range trading that has tested investor patience and miner profitability alike.

Why Miners Matter More Than Many Traders Think

On January 9, on-chain analyst Darkfost wrote on X that ignoring mining data is “a mistake,” noting that miners “represent a massive source of selling pressure.” According to the market watcher, when mining costs outweigh revenue, operators are often forced to “sell BTC” or “reduce or stop their activity by turning off machines.”

Bitcoin’s protocol targets one block every 10 minutes, adjusting mining difficulty every 2,016 blocks to maintain that pace. When block times stretch beyond the target, it usually reflects stress across the mining sector. Darkfost pointed out that strain became clear when block times pushed past 10 minutes and 30 seconds, as difficulty remained high while BTC prices moved lower and energy costs climbed.

That pressure has now started to ease. “Today, difficulty is adjusting,” Darkfost said, adding that it has already dropped by about 2.6%, with another downward change of roughly 1.88% expected. The analyst explained that this “reduces the need for miners to sell BTC just to survive,” helping stabilize activity across the network.

The timing is notable after a year of relentless increases in mining difficulty. As reported previously, Bitcoin closed 2025 with difficulty at 148.2 trillion, up 35% from the start of that year, driven by heavy investment in new hardware. While that expansion strengthened network security, it also narrowed margins when prices cooled.

Price Action and What Comes Next

Bitcoin’s price remains range-bound. It is up about 0.5% in the last 24 hours, roughly 2% on the week, but still down close to 4% year-on-year. Over the past month, the asset has slipped just over 2%, reflecting a market struggling to find direction. Furthermore, trading has largely stayed between $89,000 and $94,000, with $100,000 acting as a firm ceiling.

Analysts cited earlier this week noted that dealer hedging and unresolved CME gaps are shaping short-term moves, keeping BTC pinned below key resistance until later January options expire. Within this environment, easing miner stress could quietly remove one layer of sell-side pressure, even if it does not trigger an immediate breakout.

According to Darkfost, the Hash Ribbons indicator, which tracks miner behavior, is still flashing a buy signal, though they expect it to fade as miners return to full capacity and the hashrate recovers.

The post Analyst: How Bitcoin Difficulty Adjustments Are Stabilizing the Market appeared first on CryptoPotato.

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