
One year ago, Bitcoin underwent its fourth halving. Block rewards dropped from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC per block — and the entire crypto world held its breath.
A year later, it's worth asking the real question: did the halving actually matter?
The short answer is yes. But not in the way most people expected.
The logic is elegant and simple:
🔒 Supply shock: fewer new BTC entering circulation
📈 Demand stays constant (or grows)
⬆️ Price must rise — eventually
Every previous halving followed this playbook with a delay of 12–18 months before a major price discovery phase.
The 2024 halving was no different in theory. But the macro backdrop was unlike any before it.
The 2024 halving coincided with something new in Bitcoin's history: institutional legitimacy at scale.
By the time the halving hit, spot Bitcoin ETFs had already been approved in the US and were pulling in billions per week. BlackRock, Fidelity, and a growing list of asset managers were accumulating — not speculating.
The result?
👉 The supply shock from the halving hit at the same time as record institutional inflows
👉 Bitcoin crossed $100,000 for the first time by late 2024
👉 Corporate treasury adoption — led by Strategy — accelerated into 2025 and beyond
The halving didn't just reduce supply. It collided with a demand supercycle.
Not everything was smooth.
For miners, the halving was brutal in the short term:
Revenue per block was cut in half overnight
Less efficient miners were forced to shut down or consolidate
Hash rate briefly dipped before recovering to all-time highs
But the miners who survived? Stronger, leaner, and better capitalized than ever.
This is the halving's hidden function: it acts as a natural stress test that eliminates weak participants and strengthens the network's long-term security model.
Perhaps the most underestimated effect of the halving isn't in the price charts — it's in the story people tell about Bitcoin.
Before 2024, Bitcoin was still widely described as:
A speculative asset
"Digital gold" — for enthusiasts only
Too volatile for real portfolios
One year after the halving, that narrative has largely collapsed. Sovereign wealth funds are exploring BTC. Pension funds have exposure. Countries are debating strategic reserves.
The halving didn't just tighten supply. It marked a turning point in how the world perceives Bitcoin.
None of this means the story is risk-free.
As block rewards continue to shrink, transaction fees must eventually compensate miners. If Bitcoin's fee market doesn't develop to fill that gap, long-term network security faces real questions.
Additionally, the concentration of BTC in ETF custodians — primarily Coinbase Custody — introduces a new kind of centralization risk that Satoshi never envisioned.
The halving is a feature, not a guarantee.
The 2024 halving worked — but not in isolation.
It worked because it arrived at the exact moment that institutions, regulation, and mainstream adoption were converging. It worked because the 4-year cycle aligned with a once-in-a-generation macro shift.
The next halving is still roughly three years away.
The question isn't whether it will matter.
The question is what the world will look like when it arrives.
This is No-advice. Always do your own research.

https://www.reddit.com/r/CryptoCurrency/comments/1sp4ebr/the_bitcoin_halving_is_one_year_old_what_actually/
This post has been shared on Reddit by @uwelang through the HivePosh initiative.
I wonder as we are moving towards next halving which impacts small part from the supply, if the halving will generate similar results. In my opinion no, but that comes only from some simple math (and maybe superficial) done in my head...