How not to Bitcoin: User pays 1000X fee to send 4 BTC

Share This Post

What could have inspired a Bitcoin user to overpay by 1,000 times the asking price to move roughly $63,000 in Bitcoin?

Fat fingers? A Bitcoin (BTC) user spends over $200 to make a transaction, paying astronomically above the average fee. 

In a transaction that entered Bitcoin block 760,077, a user paid 1,136,000 Satoshis, (0.0136 BTC, $220.52) to move 3.8 BTC ($63,00). This extraordinarily high fee is a whopping 1,000 times the usual Bitcoin transaction fee, as at block height 760,077, the average transaction fee was roughly $0.20.

Twitter user Bitcoin QnA first spotted the out-of-the-ordinary transaction, asking, “Y tho?”. The Bitcoin educator told Cointelegraph that “Ultimately we’ll never know, [why they paid high], but there are a few possible answers.” QnA listed the following:

1. Using a wallet with terrible fee estimations 2. A user making a typo when manually entering their fee rate 3. An exchange processing an urgent payout. They often overpay but never normally by this much!”

Finally, QnA told Cointelegraph that it could be that the user hasn’t done their homework, and the error could be explained by “A user not understanding how miner fees work (unlikely given the amounts seen in the tx in question).”

Visual of Block 760077. Source: Mempool.space

Transaction fees on the Bitcoin base chain vary from pennies to hundreds of dollars, depending on congestion levels in the Bitcoin memory pool, or “mem pool,” as well as transaction sizes. Transaction fees are priced in Satoshis per unit of data, abbreviated to sats/vByte.

The sats/vByte rate is multiplied by the size of the transaction made to get the total fee you’ll pay. Generally speaking, the more money (or data) sent, the higher the transaction fee–although several other factors are at play.

If a user is in a hurry, they can choose to pay a higher sats/vByte fee to almost guarantee that miners will include their transaction in the next confirmed block. The cost of this luxury is a higher fee rate. The lowest fee is 1 sats/vByte; higher fees are generally considered as anything over 7 sats/vByte. For this fat-fingered Bitcoiner in question, they paid a whopping 8,042 sat/Byte, or 1,136,000 Sats.

That’s more than 1,000 times the typical fee. The median transaction fee for block 760,077 was ~8 sat/vB or $0.22.

Related: Average Bitcoin transaction fee drops under $1 as network difficulty recovers

Upon further investigation, the same wallet was involved in another Bitcoin transaction 40 minutes prior that also paid an exorbitant fee. The wallet was transferred 4.28 BTC ($83,000) for 564,096 Sats or (0.056 BTC or $109). Miners received a rate of 4,022 sat/vB for the pleasure, adding the payment into block 760,073.

Due to the Bitcoin blockchain’s pseudonymity, it is unclear why the user paid such a high transaction fee. Nor is it clear why they repeated the same action 4 blocks later. As a final suggestion, QnA joked that it could be “A rich Bitcoiner doing it to flex (unlikely).” Just wait until the user hears about the

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

BONK In Trouble As Sharp Decline Hints At An Impending Pullback

BONK is currently facing turbulent waters as a sharp decline casts a shadow over its recent price performance After a period of impressive gains, the recent downturn is raising concerns about an

Enter Into The Beacon’s Roguelike Dungeons and Earn NFTs

After a laid-back farming session in Pixels last week, Regina cranks up the intensity with The Beacon, a dungeon-crawling NFT game Last week’s quick recap From last week’s gameplay, we

XRP Set To Soar Nearly 900% To $31, Analyst Highlights Key Resistance

XRP aficionados are ecstatic when market analyst EGRAG predicted an 888% increase in the cryptocurrency’s value This optimism isn’t just wishful thinking; it’s based on trends seen

PEPE Reaches Critical Junction: Breakout Imminent Or Rejection Looming?

PEPE is approaching a pivotal moment as it tests the $000001152 level, a critical junction that could shape its next direction A breakout above this key resistance may spark renewed bullish momentum,

Why Stablecoins Fail: Lessons From the Past

Stablecoins, the cryptocurrencies pegged to fiat currencies like the US dollar to keep their value steady, can still face failures Several well-known examples demonstrate that maintaining stability

Ripple Vs. SEC Battle Far From Over As Regulator Opposes Court’s Decision

The lawsuit between Ripple and the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has in fact not ended, as new reports of the regulator possibly opposing the court’s decision have surfaced