What is Node?
A node is any computer running the network's software and storing some or all of the blockchain. Full nodes independently verify every block and transaction against the consensus rules; light nodes verify only headers and rely on full nodes for data.
Why Node matters
Understanding Node is part of building a solid mental model of how Bitcoin, blockchain and Web3 systems actually work. Concepts in the Blockchain category sit at the foundation of the broader stack — get them right and the rest is far easier.
Learn this interactively
Reading the definition is a start. ZeroToBlock teaches concepts like Node through hands-on, browser-based simulations. Build the mental model by actually using it:
- Bitcoin 101 — interactive fundamentals course
- Bitcoin Proof of Work — mining, hashing and consensus
- Browse all interactive blockchain courses
Related terms
- Consensus Mechanism — The rules a network uses to agree on the canonical chain.
- Peer-to-Peer Network — A network where every participant is both client and server.
- Full Node — A node that validates every rule for itself.
More blockchain terms
- Block — A bundle of transactions added to the blockchain.
- Blockchain — A chained, append-only ledger of blocks.
- Fork — A divergence in the blockchain or its rules.
- Proof of Stake — A consensus mechanism where validators stake capital instead of burning energy.
- Reorganization (Reorg) — Replacing recent blocks with a competing chain that has more work.
- Transaction — A signed instruction that updates the blockchain state.
- Block Time — Average interval between consecutive blocks.
- Genesis Block — The first block in a blockchain.
Keep exploring
Continue with the full blockchain glossary — 136 terms in total — or read the developer blog and FAQ for deeper context.