Solo miner finds Bitcoin block with 230 TH/s
A solo Bitcoin miner with 230 TH/s successfully mined a block through CKPool and earned 3.139 BTC, worth approximately $210,000. The event was reported by pool administrator Con Kolivas. It highlights that even with low probability, solo mining remains possible in today’s network.
A solo network participant earned 3.139 BTC for a block
A solo miner connected to CKPool found a Bitcoin block. With a hashrate of 230 TH/s, the estimated probability was about 1 in 28,000 per day.
The reward totaled 3.139 BTC, including transaction fees. CKPool charges a 2% service fee, while the rest goes to the miner.
Similar events have occurred recently:
- February 2026: a solo miner earned 3.125 BTC;
- January 2026: another miner received 3.131 BTC.
These cases confirm that solo mining still occurs within the Bitcoin ecosystem.
Solo mining remains a high-risk strategy
Solo mining is considered a high-risk strategy. Most miners join pools to ensure stable payouts. However, CKPool offers a different approach. It enables solo mining without running a full node.
Key characteristics include:
- rewards are not shared;
- income is irregular but potentially large;
- success depends on hashrate.
Meanwhile, rising network difficulty and total hashrate reduce the chances for individual miners.
Solo block discoveries do not impact the crypto market
Such events have limited direct impact on the crypto market. However, they demonstrate that individual miners can still find blocks.
Over the past 12 months:
- 20 blocks were mined by solo participants;
- total rewards reached 62.96 BTC;
- average interval was 18–19 days.
These outcomes sustain interest in solo mining, particularly among independent operators. Still, the model remains less predictable compared to pooled mining.
Individual miners remain part of the ecosystem
This case highlights that Bitcoin retains elements of decentralization. Individual miners can still participate despite industrial dominance.
At the same time, key trends remain:
- increasing network difficulty;
- dominance of large mining pools;
- declining role of solo miners.
Solo mining is becoming a niche strategy. However, such events reinforce the openness and accessibility of the Bitcoin network.
Read also: Foundry Pool Triggers Temporary Bitcoin Fork

