How Bitcoin Mining Actually Works
Mining is how new bitcoin enters circulation and how the network stays secure. Here is what miners really do and why it takes so much energy.
Key takeaways
- Miners gather pending transactions into a block and then repeatedly run that block through a hashing function, changing one small number each time, trying to produce a result below a target set by the network.
- All that trial and error consumes electricity by design.
- The network automatically adjusts how hard the puzzle is so that blocks arrive roughly every ten minutes, no matter how much mining power joins.
Bitcoin mining is often misunderstood as “solving complex maths to find coins.” It is closer to a global lottery that also secures the network — and understanding it explains a lot about how Bitcoin works.
What miners actually do
Miners gather pending transactions into a block and then repeatedly run that block through a hashing function, changing one small number each time, trying to produce a result below a target set by the network. There is no clever shortcut; it is trial and error at enormous scale. The first miner to find a valid result broadcasts the block and earns the reward.
Why it uses energy
All that trial and error consumes electricity by design. That cost is the security model: rewriting history would mean redoing the work faster than everyone else combined, which is prohibitively expensive. The energy is the price of a trustless, decentralized ledger.
Difficulty and the halving
The network automatically adjusts how hard the puzzle is so that blocks arrive roughly every ten minutes, no matter how much mining power joins. Periodically, the reward for finding a block is cut in half — the “halving” — gradually slowing the creation of new bitcoin.
Editor covering blockchain, crypto and finance news. Based in Manila.