Bitcoin’s transaction fees have fallen to a multi-year low
The outcome of a surprising — and mostly ideological — disagreement among Bitcoin node operators has resolved in favor of the average user.
For the first time in years, the minimum bitcoin (BTC) transaction fee is just 1/10th of one satoshi per virtual byte (vByte).
The decline is good news for everyday users of the network but is concerning for miners’ revenue and Bitcoin’s long-term security budget.
Many blocks are now paying half the transaction fees versus their median level just one month ago. Moreover, a significant percentage of blocks within the past few days are only partially full, meaning that even these new, infinitesimal fee rates are not attracting enough transactions to fill up every block.
1/1 billionth of a bitcoin
For most of Bitcoin Core’s existence, developers of this node software package defaulted to a minimum of one satoshi — equal to 1/100 millionth of a BTC — for transactions to gain entry into its popular memory pool (mempool) from which miners select transactions for blockchain inclusion.
However, as corporations inserted commercial interests into these mempool policy-making discussions, Core developers began advocating for relaxing not only the one-satoshi floor but also the mempool’s storage limitations for data unrelated to the on-chain movement of BTC.
Both initiatives prevailed over conservative opposition.
By early June, Core developers announced unprecedented data storage easements for arbitrary media, code, and commercial inscriptions.
By mid-July, BTC mining pool operators also began slashing their minimum fee rate 90% from one to 1/10 of a satoshi.
Read more: FixTheFilters: Bitcoin arguments go viral over relaxing Core data storage
The pie was supposed to grow
Champions of those initiatives thought that these two easements would have welcomed new users onto the Bitcoin network. The idea was to grow the pie itself — even if miners’ slice of the pie shrunk.
The goal was more users, more transactions, more data, more fees, and more everything.
Instead, activity levels barely budged. The only thing that meaningfully changed — downward — was the transaction fee rate.
As more pool operators and node operators modified their Bitcoin Core software to accept fees 90% lower than one satoshi into their mempool, the chart of percent of miner revenue from BTC fees has declined to its lowest level since 2022: 0.6%.
Fortunately, Bitcoin’s hard-coded coinbase reward per block — payable separate from user-donated transaction fees — continues to pay miners the vast majority of their revenue. Yesterday, in fact, it paid 99.4% of miners’ revenue.
Of course, this coinbase reward halves every four years, so permanently low transaction fees are ultimately unsustainable for Bitcoin’s long-term security.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Bitcoin News Today: Institutional Moves Signal Altcoin Breakout as Bitcoin's Grip Eases
- Bitcoin's market dominance declines as capital shifts to altcoins like Solana and Ethereum, signaling potential altseason patterns. - Solana's "golden cross" and "megaphone" technical patterns, plus $1B+ institutional funding plans, suggest imminent price breakouts. - Ethereum surges 40% against Bitcoin, while Litecoin and Chainlink show breakout potential amid easing regulatory uncertainty. - Historical data and macroeconomic factors indicate 2025 could see renewed altcoin momentum post-Bitcoin halving

BullZilla: The Ultimate Presale Opportunity for 2025's Exponential Meme Coin Breakout
- BullZilla ($BZIL) combines engineered scarcity and high-yield incentives via a 24-stage presale with escalating prices and 70% staking APY. - Its Mutation Mechanism increases token price every 48 hours or $100k raised, while 5% supply burns at each stage create deflationary pressure. - A 10% referral bonus and Ethereum-based security differentiate it from competitors like Pepe/Bonk, which lack structured ROI or burn mechanisms. - The 50% presale allocation and 2-year team lock ensure liquidity balance, p

TRON’s Path to a New All-Time High and Fee-Driven Network Growth
- TRON slashes network fees by 60% on August 29, 2025, reducing energy unit prices to 100 sun to boost adoption and compete with Ethereum/Solana. - The cut aims to drive 45% user growth, enhance dApp development (3,000-5,000 daily new contracts), and solidify TRON's 90% USDT transaction dominance. - While TRX faced short-term price dips and inflation risks, analysts highlight long-term benefits from increased transaction volumes and ecosystem utility. - Quarterly fee reviews and institutional partnerships

Hyperliquid (HYPE): Assessing Valuation Risks Amid Record Buybacks and Growing Institutional Adoption
- Hyperliquid's HYPE token surged to $50, driven by record trading volumes and aggressive buybacks reducing supply by 430% since April 2025. - Institutional adoption accelerated with custodians like BitGo enabling access, while regulatory risks and operational vulnerabilities emerged from token manipulation incidents. - A November 2025 token unlock (23.8% of supply) threatens to overwhelm buyback capacity, with critics warning of unrealistic $50B valuation assumptions. - Centralization risks persist throug

Trending news
MoreCrypto prices
More








