Bitcoin’s hashrate bouncing impressively after soaking in 752 exhaush per second (EH/S) on February 25, which was rising to 819.65 EH/s on March 25.
Revenue declines, hash rate rise
The network’s calculation strength has been strengthened, and is currently over 67 seconds higher than the EH/s on February 25th. At the time, the hashrate hit 752 EH/s, but as of now it is stable at 819.65 EH/s based on data tied to a seven-day simple moving average (SMA) according to HashrateIndex.com. Currently, the hashrate is located at a peak height of approximately 30 eh/s, which was hit on February 8, 2025.

Source: HashrateIndex.com metric recorded on March 17, 2025 at 12:30 PM ET.
This upward shift occurs during an attractive time, especially as revenues have dropped significantly from the lowest point in hashrate. Back on February 25th, what miners earned at 1 petahash per second per second every day was $53.89. Fast forward to March 17th, that number slipped to $46.87 per petahash, with revenue falling 13.03%.
Currently, Foundry leads the pack at around 264 EH/s, making it the largest mining pool by hashrate. With the Antpool behind at 159 EH/s, the VIABTC is not far from there at 115 EH/s. Together, these three pools account for around 538 EH/s, or about 65.63% of a total of 819.65 EH/s. The data also reveals that there will be two contrasting difficulty adjustments between the February 25th low and today, followed by a 1.43% increase.
Even if they earn less, Bitcoin hashrate recovery shows that miners have found a way to keep moving forward. Large companies like Foundry, Antpool and VIABTC have controlled much of their network and pointed to trends in continuous integration. As difficulty changes and profits fluctuate, the mining world remains vibrant and proves that Bitcoin Proof of Work (POW) systems can adapt and thrive through a changing era.