A solo miner with a hashrate of merely 70 TH/s successfully mined block #944,306 on the Bitcoin network. The reward amounted to 3.128 BTC ($222,074).
The participant also received an additional 0.003 BTC ($212) in transaction fees. The block contained 6,755 transactions.
CKPool administrator Con Kolivas stated that the chance of generating a blockchain unit with such equipment is approximately 1 in 100,000 per day. On average, a similar result occurs once every 300 years of continuous operation.
Congratulations to miner bc1q~edvj with only 70TH for solving the 313th solo block at https://t.co/AvNND5PHDY!
A miner of this size has only a 1 in ~100,000 chance of solving a block per day, or once every 300 years!https://t.co/14Q5vIFAXs pic.twitter.com/jeMnSZ7JUG— Dr -ck (@ckpooldev) April 9, 2026
“Congratulations to miner bc1q~edvj with a power of only 70 TH/s for solving the 313th solo block on eusolo.ckpool.org!” he wrote.
This hashrate is equivalent to a Bitmain Antminer S17+ mining device from 2019. The equipment of the fortunate user constitutes approximately 0.0000069% of the total Bitcoin network hashrate.
This marks the second instance this month of a solo miner successfully mining a block. On April 3, a CKPool participant with a power of 230 TH/s earned 3.139 BTC (around $210,000). However, such occurrences remain rare.
According to Bennet, over the past year, solo miners have found only 22 blocks, earning 69.24 BTC.
In the first quarter of 2026, the Bitcoin network’s hashrate declined by 6% — from 1066 EH/s to 1004 EH/s.
