The network mining difficulty rose 4.63% just four days ago, but the conflict barely disrupted the miners. The machine continues to stir with wild dedication, and protocol horsepower is blown to a shining new all-time high of 1,091 exahashes (EH/s) per second.
Minor pushes Bitcoin network to 1.091 Zettahash per second to the highest hashrate ever
Getting rewards for Bitcoin (BTC) blocks has become a grind, but miners continue to bend their muscles and push their networks higher.
According to HashrateIndex.com, the hashrate is locked at 142.34 trillion, which means punching a fresh record of 1,091 exahash (eh/s) (eh/s).
That milestone landed on September 20, 2025 and landed two days later by Monday, September 22. This calculation power is unforgiving despite the great difficulty and the fact that revenue is much lower than it was 30 days ago.

According to HashrateIndex.com, the total hashrate of Bitcoin, according to the 7-day Simple Moving Average (SMA).
Back on August 22nd, the hashrate, known as Hashpris, won $57.12 per second (ph/s). Since then, the rate has slipped at around 12.41%, bringing the ongoing price per petahash to $50.03 today. Even with a large amount of hashrate fire, the block time is zipped faster than the normal 10 minute mark, and is actively caught up in 9 minutes and 4 seconds.
If this pace continues until October 1, 2025, the next difficulty will be on track to jump by 10% or more based on current forecasts. If these predictions are successful, the difficulty level will be printed at over 150 trillion, closing the challenge of getting a block grant to a whole new level. In short, Bitcoin Miners can pack lunch better. Because the next difficulty hike feels like it’s like a heavyweight tied behind your back on your arms.