BTCC / BTCC Square / Tronweekly /
Bitcoin Miners Struggle: June’s $34M Daily Revenue Marks Worst Slump Yet

Bitcoin Miners Struggle: June’s $34M Daily Revenue Marks Worst Slump Yet

Author:
Tronweekly
Published:
2025-06-26 19:00:00
21
3

Bitcoin miners are feeling the squeeze—June's revenue crash hits hardest yet.

When the going gets tough, the tough turn off their rigs. With daily earnings plunging to a paltry $34 million, miners face their leanest month on record. The halving hangover just got real.

Market watchers smirk as 'efficient' operations suddenly look like Wall Street's favorite money-losing meme stocks. Meanwhile, hodlers shrug—this ain't their first rodeo.

bitcoin

  • Bitcoin miners’ daily revenues have plunged to $34M in June, the lowest since April 2024.
  • Falling transaction fees and weaker BTC prices are squeezing miner profitability across the board.
  • Analysts warn of broader network impacts, though some see potential bullish signs from reduced miner selling.

Bitcoin miners are enduring their most financially challenging month in more than a year, as daily revenues in June have plummeted to just $34 million, according to the latest data released by CryptoQuant. The report highlights a significant squeeze in miner profitability caused by a combination of weakening transaction fees and a moderate decline in Bitcoin’s market price, pressuring an industry already operating on tight margins.

This downturn marks the lowest daily revenue levels since April 2024 and comes at a time when expectations were high following Bitcoin’s climb past the $100,000 milestone. Instead of windfall profits, miners are now facing an increasingly harsh operational environment.

The data paints a sobering picture: CryptoQuant’s chart reveals a consistent downtrend throughout June in miner income. The revenue drop has been attributed to two major factors: falling transaction fees due to subdued on-chain activity and a pullback in BTC prices from their recent highs. Together, these elements have led to a compression in miner margins, a condition that could have Ripple effects across the wider crypto ecosystem.

GuW3Zo8WwAA9yl

Source: X

“Bitcoin miners just saw their worst payday in a year,” CryptoQuant stated, flagging the downturn as a critical pressure point for the sector. The firm’s Miner Profit/Loss Sustainability model underscores this stress, showing that current reward levels are even less sustainable than during the July 2024 dip.

Bitcoin Miners Face Revenue Squeeze

This underpayment means miners are earning significantly less than what would typically be expected based on Bitcoin’s current difficulty level and market value. As a result, many operations, particularly smaller or debt-leveraged ones, are now facing mounting financial strain. This raises concerns about possible capitulation, where struggling miners may be forced to shut down, liquidate hardware, or sell their Bitcoin reserves.

Historically, such DEEP miner underperformance has often preceded pivotal market moments. Some analysts interpret it as a bullish signal, suggesting that reduced miner selling could tighten supply and build upward pressure on price. However, the downside risks are equally pressing. If miners begin to unplug machines en masse or liquidate assets, it could lead to a temporary decline in hash rate and affect network stability.

At present, bitcoin is trading at $106,882, but fee activity remains muted, a dynamic that further weakens the miner earnings outlook. Unless the network sees a spike in transaction volumes or Bitcoin embarks on another major rally, miners may continue to struggle with historically low revenues.

BTC 1D graph coinmarketcap 50

Source: CoinMarketCap

For an industry that underpins the security and functionality of the world’s largest cryptocurrency, this prolonged earnings slump is more than a footnote; it’s a stress test with potentially far-reaching consequences.

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users