Monero, record reorganization: 18 blocks rewritten

On September 14, 2025, the Monero network experienced a deep reorganization: an alternative longer chain supplanted 18 consecutive blocks, rendering 118 transactions no longer confirmed and erasing about 36 minutes of history.

The episode — reported by CoinDesk and contextualized by the official documentation of GetMonero — reopens the discussion on the resilience of the ecosystem.

  • Reorg depth: 18 blocks (a historical record for Monero).
  • Transactions involved: 118 transactions made unconfirmed.
  • Time window: approximately 36 minutes of history rewritten.

What Happened: Timeline and Context

The event began at height 3,499,659 and propagated for 18 blocks, when the nodes accepted a longer chain proposed by the mining component associated with Qubic.

In this instance, the previous blocks became orphaned, reverting 118 transactions to the “unconfirmed” state. For further verification, you can consult the Monero block explorer at the indicated height.

According to the data collected from public explorer logs and reports from node operators contacted for this article, the reorg was visible in various parts of the network within minutes of the publication of the alternative chain.

Industry analysts note that the temporary control of over 50% of the hashrate — estimated by the community to be around 51% in the hours leading up to the event — facilitated the replacement of the blockchain history.

In the previous period, Qubic – a layer‑1 project focused on AI workloads – would have concentrated over 50% of Monero’s hashrate, according to community estimates available on miningpoolstats.stream. It should be noted that the aggregation of power in a few actors is a signal to monitor.

Immediate Impact on Network and Market

  • Network: payments considered final have returned to pending and some wallets and services have increased the number of confirmations required for greater caution.
  • Market: in the short term, the price of XMR has shown volatility, with a peak of around $333 and a subsequent retracement towards $307.5, as indicated by CoinGecko. This recently collected data also highlights liquidity variations.
  • Volume: the trading volume reached approximately $136 million in the last 24 hours, with an increase of 78% compared to the previous day, according to CoinGecko data.

Impact on Network Security

A deep reorg can occur when a single actor controls a significant share of computing power.

In fact, the principle “the longest chain wins” can overturn recent confirmations, temporarily undermining the operational trust of users and operators until the distribution of hashrate rebalances.

Technical Details: Why 118 Transactions Returned Unconfirmed

The Monero network nodes adopt the chain with the most work rule. When a sequence of blocks longer than the currently accepted one is proposed, the nodes switch to the new history, marking the previous blocks as orphans.

The transactions present in those blocks are taken back from the mempool and must be confirmed again, with possible variations in the order of inclusion.

That said, although the consensus rules are capable of preventing a double-spend, prolonged time windows can make certain risks more concrete.

uPoW and hashrate concentration

Qubic adopts a useful proof‑of‑work (uPoW) model where computational energy is used for “useful” tasks (such as AI). Additionally, the XMR rewards earned by miners can be converted to be reused within the Qubic ecosystem – for example, for buyback operations and token burn – as described in the official Qubic documentation and on the qubic.org website.

According to independent developers and analysts, this scheme can incentivize the concentration of hashrate in a single cluster, resulting in an increased risk of deep reorganizations if an alternative chain is published.

Operating Numbers and Methodology

  • Orphan rate in the last 720 blocks (approximately 24 hours): 213 orphan blocks have been identified, accounting for about 29.5% of the total, calculated by summing the blocks not included in the main chain, as reported by public explorer logs.
  • Composition: of these, 114 orphan blocks are attributed to known pools, while 99 come from unknown pools or individual miners.
  • Method: the data was obtained through a manual count on a 24-hour rolling window, with sampling at regular intervals and deduplication by height, using data from public Monero network explorers.

Solutions Under Discussion: DNS Checkpoints and Alternatives

An immediate proposal to mitigate the risks of extended reorgs is the introduction of DNS checkpoints: “signed” snapshots of the chain state distributed via DNS and managed by multiple maintainers, in order to reduce the effects of a deep reorganization.

However, this solution carries the risk of introducing an element of trust and a degree of centralization that could conflict with the inherently decentralized philosophy of Monero.

In parallel, the community is evaluating other corrective measures, such as adjusting difficulty parameters, adopting multi-party temporary checkpoints, limits on reordering beyond a certain depth, and improvements in block propagation to reduce the advantage of private chains. In this context, the balance between security and decentralization remains central.

Reactions of the community and traders

On GitHub, the researcher Rucknium described the temporary implementation of DNS checkpoints as “highly likely,” pending further evaluations on potential protocol changes (monero‑project/monero · issues).

Several long-standing community members have cautioned, arguing that a quick solution should not normalize reliance on trusted lists.

The journalist Vini Barbosa has expressed operational distrust towards the network at this juncture, announcing a precautionary halt to the acceptance of XMR payments “until technical clarifications are provided” on X (statement recently published on X [data to be verified]). His summary: «Personally, I do not consider the Monero network reliable at this moment».

What changes for users and services

  • Confirmations: it is likely that exchanges and merchants will require a higher number of confirmations to reduce operational risk during periods of instability.
  • Wallet: payments returned to the “unconfirmed” state should be re-included in subsequent blocks, although the order of inclusion may vary.
  • Volatility: phenomena related to consensus can amplify price movements and the spread in the markets, especially in the presence of variable liquidity.

Quick Glossary

  • Reorganization (reorg): replacement of a series of blocks with another chain that has a greater amount of cumulative work.
  • Orphan block: a valid block that, following a reorg, is not included in the main chain.
  • Hashrate: the total computational power used in mining; a high concentration can facilitate the imposition of alternative chains.
  • uPoW (useful proof‑of‑work): a scheme that allocates computing power to tasks considered “useful,” while simultaneously maintaining economic incentives for participants.
  • DNS checkpoints: snapshot of the chain distributed via DNS and signed by trusted operators to limit the scope of deep reorgs.

Conclusions

The reorganization episode, which occurred on September 14, 2025, highlights a structural tension between decentralization, economic security, and mining incentives. As long as the distribution of hashrate remains concentrated, the possibility of significant reorganizations remains tangible.

The solutions discussed – from DNS checkpoints to potential protocol modifications – aim to restore an operational finality in line with user expectations without distorting the original architecture of the project.

Updated on September 15, 2025.

Methodological Note and Sources

Source: https://en.cryptonomist.ch/2025/09/15/monero-record-reorganization-18-blocks-rewritten-and-118-transactions-made-unconfirmed/