Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency by market cap and trading volume, sets a new record with Block 788695 as transactions on its blockchain network spiral out of control.
Lately, there has been an alarming increase in user transactions on the Bitcoin blockchain, leading to network traffic and congestion. This has significantly increased miner profitability as transaction costs skyrocket to keep the situation in check.
In an interesting development witnessed by the crypto community yesterday, miners were seen to have benefited a lot as the transaction fees in block 788695 surpassed the block subsidy. This will be the second event for the Bitcoin network where transaction fees in a block exceed the block subsidy.
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Bitcoin Block 788695 sets another record
According to Bitcoin mining data reports from Mempool, the transaction costs in block 788695 were considered higher than the block subsidy. The reports show that 6.7 BTC in transaction fees were in block 788695, more than the block grant of 6.25 BTC.
The last time this happened was in 2017, when it was reported that transaction fees in block 500546 were higher than the block grant. This phenomenon mainly occurs when the Bitcoin blockchain network receives extraordinarily high network activity from user transactions.
Miners benefit greatly from these overcrowded blocks, which contain many user transactions compared to regular blocks. They create blocks by collecting transactions from the Mempool and adding them to a block, and once the blocks are filled, complex mathematical calculations are performed. The miner who solves the math problem is rewarded with a transaction fee and the block grant.
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The block subsidy refers to the amount of new Bitcoin created or minted in each block. For each block successfully created, the miner is allowed to mint a fixed number of new Bitcoins, based on the “current issuance rate determined by the Bitcoin protocol.”
The Bitcoin block subsidy amount is determined by an algorithm in the source code and starts at 50 BTC per block, which is divided in half every four years. The block grant splitting process, also known as BTC halving, has dropped to 6.25 from the 50 BTC where it started and is expected to continue splitting in 2024.
Why Are BTC Transaction Fees Rising?
The jump in BTC transaction fees can be attributed to recent user activity on the blockchain network. First, the introduction of the BRC-20 token standard on the Bitcoin network for seamless minting of fungible tokens has become increasingly popular in the blockchain and crypto community.
The recent hype of tokens, including meme coins minted using the BRC-20 standard, has led to increased FOMO from users making multiple token purchases and transactions on the Bitcoin network.
BTC price opens on a negative on the daily chart timeframe | Source: BTCUSD on TradingView.com
Featured image of Istock & Mempool, chart from TradingView.com