Stats That Tell the Story

Dive into real‑time metrics that reveal how this digital powerhouse moves, grows, and reacts to global market forces.
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Overview

Bitcoin Network Vital Signs (live)

Live data from blockchain.com Blockchain.com • Updated: 2026-07-14 11:15:16

Bitcoin Price
62,729
USD
↓ 1.36%
Current market price in US Dollars.
Higher price = stronger adoption
Market Cap
1.26 T
USD
↓ 1.35%
Total market capitalization.
Size of the Bitcoin economy
Trade Volume
160.27 M
USD
↑ 145.59%
Trading volume reported by exchanges.
Higher volume = more interest
Circulating Supply
20.06 M
BTC
Bitcoin in circulation.
Getting closer to 21 million
Hash Rate
904.00 EH/s
↓ 1.32%
Total computational power.
Higher = more secure
Network Difficulty
127.17 T
0%
Mining difficulty.
Higher = miners very committed
Total Blocks Mined
957,994
Blocks
Total blocks since genesis.
Blockchain grows steadily
Avg Block Time
9.5
minutes
↑ 1.27%
Average time between blocks.
Healthy range is ~10 minutes
Confirmed Transactions
689,490
Transactions
↓ 8.97%
Confirmed in last 24h.
More tx = real world usage
Active BTC Nodes
Data missing
Nodes
0%
Publicly reachable nodes.
More nodes = greater decentralization
Next Halving
646 days
Current reward 3.125 BTC → 1.5625 BTC
Expected ~ April 2028
Bitcoin Mood
Optimistic
Community sentiment based on polls.
🐂 53% • 😐 20% • 🐻 28%
Higher optimism = bullish future

Currency Statistics

Charts made simple for everyone

Bitcoin Mining Hashrate Distribution 2026 • Cambridge CBECI

Data refreshed from blockchain.com

Total Bitcoins in Circulation is basically Bitcoin’s population count — a live tally of how many coins have escaped the mines and are now roaming the digital world. With new BTC trickling in every ten minutes and the cap locked at 21 million, this number is like watching a rare species approach its final form. Every uptick is another coin joining the wild, and every glance at the chart is a reminder that the supply is running out fast.

Total Bitcoins in Circulation

Daily average • Data: blockchain.com Blockchain.com

1W 1M 1Y ALL
BTC mined
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Total Bitcoins in Circulation is basically Bitcoin’s population count — a live tally of how many coins have escaped the mines and are now roaming the digital world. With new BTC trickling in every ten minutes and the cap locked at 21 million, this number is like watching a rare species approach its final form. Every uptick is another coin joining the wild, and every glance at the chart is a reminder that the supply is running out fast.

Bitcoin Price

Daily average • Data: blockchain.com Blockchain.com

1W 1M 1Y ALL
Current price
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Bitcoin’s price is basically the world’s mood ring for digital money. With only 21 million ever to exist—and almost all of them already mined—its value swings fast whenever buyers and sellers shift their vibe. Limited supply meets global emotion, and the number you see is the live result of that tug‑of‑war.

Bitcoin Market Cap

Daily average • Data: blockchain.com Blockchain.com

1W 1M 1Y ALL
Market capitalization
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Market capitalization is Bitcoin’s bragging rights — the big, shiny scoreboard showing how much the entire network is “worth” when you multiply every coin by the current price. It’s the crypto world’s version of a flex: the higher the market cap, the louder Bitcoin stands on the podium, reminding everyone just how massive (or moody) the market can be. It’s not just a number — it’s Bitcoin’s way of saying, “Yeah, I’m kind of a big deal.”

Mining Information

Bitcoin Network Hashrate

Daily average • Data: blockchain.com Blockchain.com

1W 1M 1Y ALL
Current avg.
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The Bitcoin hash rate is the network’s raw muscle — its digital horsepower — showing how hard miners are collectively cranking away to secure the chain. When the hash rate climbs, it’s like Bitcoin just hit the gym and started lifting heavier; when it dips, the network’s taking a breather. On a chart, it looks like the pulse of a global army of machines, all racing to solve puzzles and keep Bitcoin unstoppable.

Bitcoin Network Difficulty

Daily average • Data: blockchain.com Blockchain.com

1W 1M 1Y ALL
Current avg.
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Network difficulty is Bitcoin’s way of leveling up the game — the built‑in mechanic that decides how hard miners have to work to crack the next block. When more miners jump in, the difficulty cranks itself up like the blockchain saying, “Oh, you thought this was easy?” When miners leave, it chills out a bit. On a chart, it looks like Bitcoin constantly adjusting its own boss‑fight settings to keep the challenge fair, the blocks steady, and the network tough as nails.

Latest Bitcoin Blocks

Real-time data from mempool.space mempool.space

Latest block height

Scroll horizontally to see more blocks • Click height or pool to explore

The Latest Bitcoin Blocks are like the network’s ongoing adventure log — each new block is a fresh page stamped into Bitcoin’s never‑ending story. Every few minutes, miners race to add the next chapter, locking in transactions, sealing them with cryptographic muscle, and passing the baton to the block that follows. Watching the block list update feels like watching digital history being written in real time, one hash at a time.

What do the datapoints mean?

Block Height: 955,533 (Example)
The block’s height is its position in the blockchain. Block 955,533 means it’s the 955,533rd block since Bitcoin’s genesis block. Height is how Bitcoin measures time and ordering.

Timestamp: 55 min ago / 26 Jun 2026 at 20:47 (Example)
This is when the block was mined and added to the chain. Timestamps don’t need to be exact—miners can be off by up to ~2 hours—but they give a rough chronological order.

Miner / Pool: Foundry USA (Example)
This shows which mining pool successfully mined the block. Foundry USA is one of the largest Bitcoin mining pools, often responsible for a significant share of global hash rate.

Transactions: 4,366 TXs (Example)
The number of individual Bitcoin transactions included in this block. More transactions generally mean higher fees and a fuller block.

Block Size: 1.61 MB (Example)
The raw data size of the block. Although Bitcoin has a “1 MB block size limit,” SegWit changed how size is calculated, so blocks often exceed 1 MB in actual bytes.

Total Fees: 0.045 BTC (Example)
The sum of all transaction fees paid by users whose transactions were included in this block. This amount goes to the miner in addition to the block subsidy.

Block Health: 100% (Example)
A measure used by some explorers to show whether the block is valid, fully propagated, and meets all consensus rules. 100% means everything checks out.

Block Weight: 3.99 / 4.00 MWU (Example)
Block weight is Bitcoin’s modern limit system introduced with SegWit.

This block used 3.99 MWU, meaning it was almost completely full.
Max weight: 4,000,000 weight units (4 MWU)

Network Activity

Bitcoin Transactions Per Second

Daily average • Data: blockchain.com Blockchain.com

1W 1M 1Y ALL
Current avg. transactions/sec
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Bitcoin TPS is basically the network’s heartbeat — a steady thump‑thump of how many payments it can squeeze through every second. On a chart, it looks like Bitcoin doing cardio: sometimes cruising, sometimes pushing harder, always showing how fast the system can move money around the world without asking anyone’s permission.