According to analysts at investment firm VanEck, Bitcoin miner debt has increased by 500% over the past 12 months, from $2.1 billion to $12.7 billion.
This record growth is driven by the need to invest in new hardware and artificial intelligence infrastructure.
According to VanEck analyst Nathan Frankowitz and head of digital asset research Matthew Siegel, without continued investment, miners' share of the global hashrate will decline.
We call this dynamic the melting ice cube problem. Historically, mining companies have relied on stock markets rather than debt to finance such high capital expenditures.
This is because miners' revenues are difficult to predict, as they depend almost entirely on the price of Bitcoin, which is speculative. It's important to note that equity capital is generally more expensive than debt, according to Frankowitz and Siegel.
According to industry publication The Miner Mag, the combined debt and convertible bond holdings of 15 public miners reached a record $4.6 billion in Q4 2024, then declined to $200 million in early 2025, and then rose again to $1.5 billion in Q2 2025.
More and more Bitcoin miners are diversifying their revenue streams by reallocating their energy capacity to AI and high-performance computing hosting services. However, analysts are confident that this does not pose a threat to the network's hashrate.
Bitcoin mining remains an easy way to quickly monetize excess energy in remote or developing energy markets, effectively subsidizing the development of data centers designed for AI and high-performance computing.
