The halving is defined by block height, not by a calendar date.
the monetary clock
Bitcoin issues new coins on a fixed schedule that halves about every four years. Here is where the current epoch stands, read as an instrument. It is a clock for the issuance, never a forecast for the price.
What this page answers
Bitcoin's block subsidy halves every 210,000 blocks, roughly every four years. This page reads where the current epoch stands: the live block height, blocks and days to the next halving, and the subsidy now, beside the moon phase and the sun over the trading day. It is time and issuance, not a price forecast.
56%into the fifth epoch
The halving changes how fast new supply arrives, not the price. This reads time and issuance from the chain itself. Information, not financial advice.
Bitcoin's issuance schedule is visible because the block subsidy is written into the protocol. The date is estimated because blocks arrive at a variable pace.
The halving is defined by block height, not by a calendar date.
The next halving changes subsidy from the current reward to the next reward.
Supply issuance is real. Market response is not guaranteed by the clock.
Estimated around April 2028, with 92,792 blocks remaining at this read.
Liquidity wakes region by region. As the sun crosses, the Asia, Europe, and Americas desks light in turn, the same handoff the Coinbase and Upbit premiums read on The Flows. Shown at 17:40 UTC.
The oldest instrument in the almanac, computed from the synodic month.
About 56% through the fifth epoch, with 92,792 blocks (roughly 644 days) to the next halving, estimated around April 2028.
Estimated around April 2028, at block 1,050,000, when the block subsidy falls from 3.125 to 1.5625 BTC.
3.125 BTC per block, halving to 1.5625 BTC at the next halving.
No. The halving is a fixed change to how fast new supply is issued, not a price forecast. Bathymark reads it as time and issuance only. Information, not financial advice.