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Glossary

Block Reward

Plain-language definition

A block reward is the payment a miner or validator receives for successfully adding a new block to a blockchain. It is the main incentive that keeps a network secure.

How it works

The reward usually has two parts: newly issued coins (the “subsidy”) and the transaction fees paid by users whose transactions are in the block. On proof-of-work chains the reward goes to the miner who solves the block; on proof-of-stake chains it goes to the chosen validator. On many networks the subsidy shrinks over time — on Bitcoin it halves at fixed intervals.

Why it matters

Block rewards are how new coins enter circulation and how networks pay for their own security. As the issued portion declines on capped-supply chains, transaction fees are expected to make up a larger share of the reward over time.

Example

When a miner adds a Bitcoin block, they receive the current coin subsidy plus the fees from the transactions it contains.