Bitcoin minimum transaction fee drops by 90%
The minimum fees required for a Bitcoin transaction have been slashed by 90%. This news comes amid the debates over what the asset is best suited for. Some believe it is better for everyday payments, while others are still adamant that it satisfies the conditions to be a store of value.
Over the past few years, there have been several enthusiasts who have felt Bitcoin is no longer a regular digital asset, considering the fact that the asset’s value has been quite stable since it launched. To make it more appealing, users of the biggest crypto network can now pay as low as 0.1 satoshi per virtual byte (sat/vByte) to process their transactions. A satoshi is the smallest unit of Bitcoin, with 1 satoshi currently standing at about 0.00000001 BTC.
Bitcoin minimum transaction fee drops by 90%
According to previous records, miners usually need to pay 1 satoshi/vByte as minimum fees to process their transactions. But because the leading digital assets network has been lacking in activities for a while, miners have decided to cut the minimum rate down by 905 in order to add more blocks to the blockchain. This refers to the weight of a transaction and how fast it will be processed. When the blockchain is busy, it will typically cost more to have miners prioritize your transactions.
This latest development shows that demand for block space has dropped drastically. In other words, people are no longer making as many transactions as they used to, pushing miners to consider accepting lower fees. The Bitcoin network is run mainly by miners, which today mostly comprises industrial operations of warehouses full of sophisticated computers that process transactions on the network.
Miners earn rewards by processing blocks, which contain transaction data, and adding them to the blockchain. For every block that is processed, miners are open to rewards of up to 3.125 BTC, which is currently worth around $367,000 at the current price, along with transaction fees. But as fewer people carry out transactions like sending funds, Ordinals inscriptions (NFTs), or other actions, transaction fees have been forced to remain low, which means miners earn less for every successful block they win.
Prominent BTC proponents bemoan drop in network activity
According to a pseudonymous Bitcoin miner Econoalchemist, transactions at the 0.1 sat/vByte fee rate have always been acceptable by most miners in the protocol. However, he noted that some node operators may choose to ignore such low fees. With Mempool and others now pushing the low fees, it means that there is a growing consensus among them towards accepting these kinds of transactions. “Over time, policy rules will trend toward matching consensus rules, lifting most relay restrictions,” he said.
Prominent personalities in the payments and crypto space have previously lamented the slow rate of transactions on the blockchain, with former Twitter boss and Square CEO Jack Dorsey being the latest. Dorsey, a big fan of Bitcoin, said that the cryptocurrency would only succeed if people use it for sending and receiving money as it was designed for. “I think if it doesn’t transition to payments and find that everyday use case, it just gets increasingly irrelevant,” Dorsey said during a podcast in April.
While Bitcoin has not been used for sending and receiving money like most people believe, it is currently satisfying another use case: individuals and firms are using it as a store of value. This action has propelled the asset to new all-time highs. “I suppose time will tell, but Bitcoin seems to be moving into [a store of value asset] and not being used for any type of transactions,” Scott Norris, CEO of Bitcoin miner Optiminer, said.
Even with this new development, the sender of a crypto transaction can still choose the fee. This means that if they are in a hurry to get a payment seen and processed on time by miners, they can just increase the fee, and it will be added to a block quicker. Meanwhile, some users on X have expressed delight at how cheap it was to use the blockchain. “I love seeing sub-1 sat/vbyte transactions in my Mempool,” adding that he wanted to “pay as little as possible,” a user wrote.