TERM_DEF // PROTOCOL_ECONOMICS / SAT_VBYTE
SAT/VBYTE
Sat/vByte. Satoshis per virtual byte — the canonical feerate unit.
This page sits in the Protocol Economics section — The fee market, block-space scarcity, and the post-subsidy security budget. Read on for what it is, why it exists, how it works under the hood, and what to watch out for.
This page sits in the Protocol Economics section — The fee market, block-space scarcity, and the post-subsidy security budget. Read on for what it is, why it exists, how it works under the hood, and what to watch out for.
WHAT_SAT_VBYTE_IS
Sat/vByte — at a glance
PROTOCOL ECONOMICS
Sat/vByte is part of Bitcoin's monetary policy and economic incentive structure. Satoshis per virtual byte — the canonical feerate unit. The economics aren't an afterthought — they are the protocol. Block rewards pay for security; fees price block space; the issuance schedule defines monetary supply.
Why it exists
DESIGN
A decentralised money needs incentives strong enough to keep miners honest and disciplined enough to make the unit worth holding. Bitcoin's design encodes those incentives in consensus rules: a hard-capped supply (21M BTC), a halving issuance schedule, and a market-clearing fee auction for block inclusion. Sat/vByte is one of the gears in that machine.
HOW_IT_WORKS
Mechanism
HOW IT WORKS
Every block pays its finder a coinbase reward = current subsidy + sum of fees in the block. The subsidy halves every 210,000 blocks (~4 years), driving cumulative issuance asymptotically toward 21,000,000 BTC. As the subsidy falls, fees rise as a share of miner revenue — and the long-run security model assumes fees alone fund mining once subsidy → 0 (around year 2140).
1. Each block adds new BTC: at block height H, subsidy = 50 BTC × 0.5^floor(H / 210000).
2. Halvings: 210,000 → 50 BTC, 420,000 → 25, 630,000 → 12.5, 840,000 → 6.25 → 3.125 (current), …
3. Users include a fee in each transaction; miners pick the highest fee-per-weight txs into the next block.
4. Mempool congestion → fees rise; empty mempool → fees fall to a floor of ~1 sat/vB.
5. Miners pay their electricity from BTC revenue, denominated in fiat — so price + hashrate + difficulty form a closed loop.
6. After ~year 2140, all 21M BTC are issued; security relies entirely on fee revenue and a vibrant on-chain market.
WORKED_EXAMPLE
The issuance schedule, in numbers
EXAMPLE
Halving # Block range Subsidy Cumulative BTC at end
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
0 0 – 209,999 50.0 10,500,000
1 210,000 – 419,999 25.0 15,750,000
2 420,000 – 629,999 12.5 18,375,000
3 630,000 – 839,999 6.25 19,687,500
4 840,000 – 1,049,999 3.125 20,343,750 ← (current era)
5 1,050,000–1,259,999 1.5625 20,671,875
…
32+ block ~6.7M+ ≈ 0 19,999,999.99… (asymptote → 21M)
By 2030 : ~19.95M / 21M (95% issued)
By 2032 : 5th halving, subsidy → 1.5625 BTC
By 2140 : all 21M issued, miner revenue = fees only
KEY_PROPERTIES
FIXED CAP
Total supply asymptotically approaches 21,000,000 BTC. Enforced by consensus, not policy — no central bank can override it.
DISINFLATIONARY
New supply growth halves every 4 years; the issuance rate falls below any major fiat currency by the 2030s.
FEE-DRIVEN SECURITY
As block subsidies fall, transaction fees must rise to keep the security budget high enough to deter 51% attacks.
PERMISSIONLESS MINING
Anyone can compete to find blocks. ASIC manufacturing is concentrated but the labour itself — finding nonces — is open to anyone with hardware.
COMMON_PITFALLS
Things that catch people out
PITFALLS
- "Stock to flow" (S2F) was a popular price model but has missed predictions repeatedly — Bitcoin's price is not deterministic from issuance alone.
- Mining is profitable only when electricity is cheap AND difficulty hasn't yet caught up. Most retail mining loses money long-term.
- Fees can spike to $50+ per transaction in congested periods. Lightning Network and batching mitigate this for most use cases.
- The 21M cap is a cultural and code-level convention — technically a fork/">hard fork could change it, but no community-wide upgrade would accept that.
RELATED_CONCEPTS
Other terms from Protocol Economics — click any to read its page:
TERMINOLOGY_INDEX
TERMINOLOGY
Sat/vByte
Satoshis per virtual byte — the canonical feerate unit.
Fee Market
The auction for block space where higher-fee transactions get included sooner.
Block Space Market
Synonym for fee market — the constrained resource users bid for.
Block Reward Curve
The deterministic decay of subsidy plus the rising share of fees, forming long-term miner revenue.
Subsidy Decay
The geometric decline in coinbase subsidy across halvings.
Transaction Fee Revenue
Miner income from fees; increases in share as subsidy declines.
Replace-by-Fee Market
The implicit fee-bidding war when an unconfirmed tx is replaced upward to chase confirmation.
Mempool Congestion
When demand for block space exceeds supply and feerates rise.