$38.50
USD · 20 minutes ago
Dash Halving Countdown
DASH
Dash Halving Countdown
DASH
$38.50
USD · 20 minutes ago
Hashrate
3.75 PH/s
Difficulty
136,259,225
Block reward
2.2128 DASH
Block time
156s
Height
2,482,332
Next halving in
—
days
—
hours
—
minutes
—
seconds
Estimated date: July 10, 2026
· 37,668 blocks remaining
Current reward
2.2128 DASH
Next reward
1.1064 DASH
Blocks remaining
37,668
Halving block
2,520,000
Block 2,310,000
Block 2,520,000
82.1% complete · Block 2,482,332
Dash Halving History
| Halving | Height | Block reward |
|---|---|---|
| Genesis | 0 | 5.0000 DASH |
| #1 | 210,000 | 5.0000 DASH |
| #2 | 420,000 | 4.6429 DASH |
| #3 | 630,000 | 4.3112 DASH |
| #4 | 840,000 | 4.0033 DASH |
| #5 | 1,050,000 | 3.7173 DASH |
| #6 | 1,260,000 | 3.4518 DASH |
| #7 | 1,470,000 | 3.2052 DASH |
| #8 | 1,680,000 | 2.9763 DASH |
| #9 | 1,890,000 | 2.7637 DASH |
| #10 | 2,100,000 | 2.5663 DASH |
| #11 | 2,310,000 | 2.3830 DASH |
| #12 | 2,520,000 | 1.1064 DASH |
What is the Dash Halving?
The Dash halving is a pre-programmed event that cuts the block reward miners receive by 50%. It occurs every 210,000 blocks — roughly every 4 years.
This mechanism controls Dash's inflation rate. By reducing the rate at which new coins are created, it ensures a predictable, declining supply schedule.
For miners, the halving means earning 50%% fewer coins for the same computational work. Less efficient hardware may become unprofitable. However, halvings have historically preceded significant price appreciation.
FAQ
About the Dash halving
What is the Dash halving?
The Dash halving is a pre-programmed event that reduces the block reward miners receive by 50%. It occurs every 210,000 blocks. This mechanism controls Dash's inflation rate and limits the total supply.
When is the next Dash halving?
The next Dash halving is estimated around July 2026 at block height 2,520,000. The block reward will drop from 2.2128 to 1.1064 DASH.
How does the halving affect mining profitability?
The halving cuts miners' block reward income in half while mining costs remain the same. Less efficient hardware may become unprofitable. However, halvings have historically preceded price increases that can offset the reduced rewards.