Solo Bitcoin Miner Nabs $200K After Renting $75 Worth of Hash Power

BTC0,48%
POWER5,65%

In brief

  • A Bitcoin miner rented $75 worth of hash power and earned a $200,000 BTC reward by finding a block.
  • Based on current Bitcoin mining dynamics, such an event is likely to happen only once every 21 years.
  • Participating in solo Bitcoin mining has been likened by experts to “playing the lottery.”

A Bitcoin miner that rented $75 of mining power defied the odds by finding a solo block reward, earning more than 3.1 BTC worth around $200,000 early Tuesday.  The individual rented the minimum 1 Petahash/s (PH) of hash power via Braiins hash power marketplace, which allows users to rent Bitcoin mining capacity directly from the company without needing to install or operate any physical hardware themselves.  Based on the current hash rate of the Bitcoin network, at that mining capacity, a success would only occur approximately every 1 out of 1.1 million blocks, or about 21 years’ worth of mining, according to estimates from SoloChance.com.

💥BREAKING

A miner just found a 3.125 BTC block using on-demand hashrate.

• 1 PH/s rented
• 119k sats (~$75) spent
• Block 938092
• Worker: spiral
• Hashpower fees: 0
• Solo fee: 0.5% (CKPool open-source contribution)

Congratulations! Try Hashpower today. Link in bio🍀 pic.twitter.com/S1F4MfuHPN

— Braiins (@Braiins) February 24, 2026

Solo mining wins are rare, as most Bitcoin blocks are found and awarded to large mining pools that have dedicated massive amounts of computational power to solving cryptographic puzzles, which underpin Bitcoin’s public ledger and network.  But the act, likened by experts to “playing the lottery,” has provided a handful of jackpot winners of late. In January, two solo Bitcoin miners pulled in more than 3.1 BTC in respective rewards worth around $300,000 at the time. In December, another miner beat the odds, scoring a reward of more than $282,000 based on BTC’s price at that time.   The feats are even more impressive when you consider the growing hashrate, or the total computational power of the network, which is above 1.1 Zhash/s on average per day according to data from Bitinfo. At this time last year, the network’s overall computational power was around 730 Ehash/s—about 61% of its current capacity.

That growing share may be coming from miners in China or elsewhere, as North American mining pools saw a declining share of computation power in 2025. A portion of that decline can be attributed to pools and miners that had previously been focused on mining BTC shifting their attention to growing demand for AI compute. For example, publicly traded Bitcoin miners like Bitfarms are completely winding down their mining operations, while others like Riot Platforms are being urged by investors to capitalize on opportunities in AI. A representative for Braiins did not immediately respond to _Decrypt’s _request for comment.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

Bitcoin ETFs 'will be larger' than gold ETFs: Analyst

Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) could surpass gold ETFs in total assets under management (AUM) as investor demand expands beyond the traditional “digital gold” narrative, according to ETF analyst James Seyffart. “There are just more use cases of why somebody would put a Bitcoin ETF in a p

Cointelegraph7m ago

Bitcoin's $1.3 trillion security race: Key initiatives aimed at quantum-proofing the world's largest blockchain

Quantum computers capable of breaking the Bitcoin blockchain do not exist today. Developers, however, are already considering a wave of upgrades to build defenses against the potential threat, and rightfully so, as the threat is no longer hypothetical. This week, Google published research

CoinDesk38m ago

Michael Saylor calls BIP-110 Bitcoin’s largest self-inflicted risk

Strategy co-founder Michael Saylor believes that Bitcoin (BTC) has gained overwhelming dominance in the global “media war.” However, he also warns that changes at the protocol level—especially the proposed BIP-110—could become the biggest remaining risk to the network

TapChiBitcoin42m ago

Here's what 'cracking' bitcoin in 9 minutes by quantum computers actually means

Google's Quantum AI team said earlier this week that a future quantum computer could derive a bitcoin private key from a public key in roughly nine minutes. The number ricocheted across social media and spooked markets. But, what does it actually mean in practice? Let's start with how bitcoin

CoinDesk1h ago

Data: Within two months after a major shock, Bitcoin’s performance has broadly outperformed gold and the S&P 500 index

Gate News message, April 5, according to data, within the two months after major global shock events, Bitcoin generally performed better than gold and the S&P 500 index (a U.S. stock market benchmark index). In specific data, after the Trump administration announced large-scale tariff measures in April 2025, Bitcoin rose 24% in the following 60 days, gold rose 8%, and the S&P 500 rose 4%. In early March 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic broke out, Bitcoin also rose 21%, outperforming gold and the S&P 500 index.

GateNews3h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments