Bitcoin (BTC) trades near $63,000 after recovering about 4%, yet it sits roughly 50% below its record high. One on-chain marker, the Bitcoin Electrical Cost near $48,694, now frames the question of where this bear market finally bottoms.
The indicator tracks the cost miners incur to produce each coin in terms of pure energy. Many analysts treat it as a hard floor because the price has rarely closed beneath it for long.
What is Bitcoin’s Electrical Cost?
The Electrical Cost is provided by Capriole Investments and its founder, Charles Edwards, a member of the BeInCrypto Markets Intelligence Council.
It estimates the average electricity bill miners pay to mint one bitcoin. The current reading sits at about $48,694.
A related metric, Production Cost, adds hardware and overhead costs to the energy cost. That figure is higher, which is why the two numbers should not be confused.
Analyst Ted Pillows shared a monthly chart spanning 2012 to 2026. On it, the red Electrical Cost line tracks below the price through every cycle. Bitcoin has repeatedly bounced off it at the 2015, 2018, 2020, and 2022 lows.
“Until something catastrophic happens, like Covid or a global recession, Bitcoin will most likely bottom around $50,000,” Pillows wrote.
Edwards added one correction for accuracy. Price has slipped under the line before, though only briefly during acute shocks.
“Yes it has dropped below, but only for a couple weeks in history,” Edwards replied.
That history makes the metric a durable floor rather than an unbroken one.
Where $48,694 Fits in Bitcoin’s Support Ladder
The Electrical Cost does not stand alone. It sits inside a stack of supports that recent BeInCrypto analysis has mapped out.
The first rung is the 200-week moving average near $62,000, which Bitcoin tagged this month for the first time this cycle. Below it lies the 300-week average and realized price of around $54,000.
The Electrical Cost at $48,694 sits just under that band. Beneath it, the $40,000s zone opens, which three independent charts flag as the deeper cycle low.
Timing reinforces the level. Analyst Benjamin Cowen places his base case bottom in October 2026. A separate halving day count points to roughly the same window, about 125 days out.
The Electrical Cost is the on-chain floor those earlier pieces gestured toward without naming. It also lands almost exactly where Pillows expects the bottom to be, near $50,000.
What Would Have to Break for the BTC Floor to Fail
The thesis carries a clear condition. Edwards himself flagged that only a catastrophe has pushed prices below the line, so a recession or a Covid-style shock remains the main threat.
History adds caution too. The 200-week average failed as support in 2022, when Bitcoin spent months trading beneath it. A repeat would put the $48,694 floor in play.
Macro events could decide the path. The Federal Reserve meets on June 17, alongside a Bank of Japan decision that may pressure risk assets.
Bitcoin currently trades near $63,000, between the 200-week average and the realized price. A weekly close under $54,000 would expose the Electrical Cost at $48,694 as the next test.
A break of that floor would open the $40,000s in line with the cycle-low charts. Holding it would hand bulls their strongest argument that the bottom is near. The next few weeks should show which case the market chooses.
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