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A lucky solo Bitcoin miner has achieved the rare feat of solving one of the blockchain’s blocks on their own and taking home the full subsidy and transaction fee reward without the help of a major company’s resources.
Individual Miner Hits The Jackpot
An unknown miner on Friday snared a $266,000 reward for solving block 888,737. Data from Bitcoin block explorer mempool. space shows that that bounty includes the current 3.125 Bitcoin mining reward and another 0.032 BTC from transaction fees. Today’s Bitcoin price is around $84,200 per coin, which adds up to a payday of around $266,000.
Bitcoin miners process transactions and keep the Bitcoin network secure. They input computational power to solve a new block roughly every 10 minutes by competing against the whole Bitcoin network hash rate. When blocks are processed, miners are rewarded with newly minted Bitcoins. Over the years, Mining Bitcoin has gradually become harder and more energy-intensive, requiring more resources.
And miners now receive less BTC as a reward for their troubles. In April 2024, the Bitcoin protocol’s quadrennial halving event took place, reducing miner rewards to 3.125 BTC from 6.25.
Most Bitcoin is mined by large mining firms such as Bit Digital, Riot Blockchain, and Marathon Digital, each commanding enormous amounts of hash power through their massive industrial operations.
But occasionally, a solo miner can get lucky and mine a block using a home hobby machine — though it’s extremely rare. Per blockchain data, the miner in Friday’s case used a low-cost DIY FutureBit Apollo machine.
Last month, another lone-wolf Bitcoin miner hit the jackpot by successfully solving a valid block on the biggest cryptocurrency’s network and pocketing a $300,000 reward.