Bitcoin has just seen its mining difficulty drop by more than 11%. It’s not a small adjustment. This is the sharpest negative adjustment since China’s mining ban in 2021.
This kind of movement signals real stress beneath the surface. The profitability of the mining sector has been greatly reduced, and the weakest operators are clearly feeling it. Reducing the difficulty gives surviving miners some breathing room at the moment. 
(Source: Bitbo)
But this relief may not last. If the price remains under pressure or the hash rate fluctuates again, the stress could return quickly.
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What the 11% drop means for miners
The difficulty dropped to around 125.86 trillion at block 935.424. Simply put, it has become 11% easier to mine Bitcoin than it was two weeks ago.
This happened because a large portion of the hashrate was taken offline, primarily due to high energy costs and operational constraints.
Shock Difficulty
Bitcoin mining difficulty just dropped -11.16% – the largest negative adjustment since China’s mining ban crashed in July 2021.
This is the 10th largest downward difficulty adjustment in Bitcoin history.
A major reset of hashing power dynamics. pic.twitter.com/jJCb5ywUm6
– Maartunn (@JA_Maartun) February 12, 2026
But remember that the difficulty is retrospective. It reflects the last two weeks and not real-time conditions. And there are already signs that the machines are coming back online. CoinWarz even predicts a potential decline of 12% as early as next week.
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What this means for the price of Bitcoin
So is this a buying signal? Not now.
Historically, miner capitulation often occurs near market bottoms. When weaker miners close their doors and stop selling, it can signal that the worst of forced supply is behind us. This is the bullish case.
But the pressure is still real. Miners have electricity bills and debts. When margins tighten, they sell what they extract instead of keeping it. This creates constant selling pressure, especially in weak markets.
Large institutions play a different game. Long-term players tend to use dips to accumulate, betting on a recovery over years, not weeks. Yet recent industry results show that volatility hits everyone from mining companies to large holding companies.

(Source: BTCUSD/TradingView)
Now here is the main risk. If difficulties reappear next week without a significant price rebound, miners will find themselves stuck again. This could restart the stress cycle.
Watch for the next adjustment around February 20. And keep an eye out for $60,000. If buyers can absorb the miners selling there, the structure holds. Otherwise, the market could suffer a further decline.
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Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Drops 11%, What This Means for Miners & BTC Price appeared first on 99Bitcoins.



