PipeFlare

Crypto Mining Profitability Calculator

Enter your daily revenue, power draw, electricity cost and pool fee to see whether mining is profitable right now โ€” plus hardware break-even.

Updated June 2026 ยท Reviewed by the PipeFlare team ยท Educational only, not financial advice

DAILY ELECTRICITY COST

$9.36

DAILY PROFIT

-$4.41

MONTHLY PROFIT

-$132.30

Educational only, not financial advice. Coin price and network difficulty change constantly.

Get your daily mining revenue figure from your mining software or pool dashboard (it already accounts for the live coin price and current network difficulty) โ€” this tool does not fetch or guess that number for you, so the output is only as accurate as the revenue you enter. Revenue and difficulty both shift daily, so re-check it often. See how crypto mining works for what determines profitability before you buy hardware.

What this crypto mining calculator does

This crypto mining calculator takes the daily revenue your mining software or pool already reports, subtracts the pool fee and your electricity cost, and shows your daily and monthly profit โ€” plus, if you enter a hardware cost, how many days until that hardware pays for itself at the current rate. It works for any proof-of-work coin โ€” Bitcoin, Litecoin, Monero, Ravencoin and others โ€” because the math runs purely on the numbers you enter, not a specific network. Educational only, not financial advice. If you are new to how mining works, start with how crypto mining works.

How mining profit is calculated

Net revenue is your daily revenue after the pool takes its cut: revenue ร— (1 โˆ’ pool fee). Daily electricity cost converts your miner's power draw to kilowatt-hours over 24 hours and multiplies by your local rate: (watts รท 1000) ร— 24 ร— $/kWh. Daily profit is net revenue minus that electricity cost, and monthly profit multiplies the daily figure by 30. If you enter a hardware cost, break-even is simply hardware cost รท daily profit, rounded up to the next full day.

What this calculator does not include

This tool does not fetch or guess a coin price, hashrate, or network difficulty โ€” you supply the daily revenue figure from your own mining software or pool dashboard, since that number already bakes in the live price and difficulty and changes constantly. It also does not model hardware depreciation or resale value, cooling costs beyond the miner's own power draw, or taxes โ€” mined coins are ordinary income at fair market value when received in the US. See how crypto mining works for the full picture, including which coins remain mineable without an ASIC.

Common questions

What is a crypto mining calculator?

A crypto mining calculator estimates whether mining is profitable by subtracting your electricity cost from your mining revenue. You enter your daily revenue (from your mining software or pool dashboard), your miner's power draw, your local electricity rate, and your pool fee, and it returns daily profit, monthly profit, and โ€” if you enter a hardware cost โ€” how many days until that hardware pays for itself.

Where do I get my daily mining revenue number?

Your mining software or pool dashboard (NiceHash, WhatToMine, or your pool's own stats page) already reports estimated daily revenue in dollars, calculated from your hashrate against the live coin price and current network difficulty. This calculator does not fetch or guess that figure โ€” paste in the number your pool already shows you, since it changes with the market and difficulty adjustments.

Why does electricity cost matter so much for mining profit?

Electricity is usually the largest ongoing cost in crypto mining, and it runs 24/7 whether or not the coin price cooperates. A miner drawing 3,250 watts at $0.12/kWh costs about $9.36 a day in power alone. At grid rates above roughly $0.15โ€“0.20/kWh, most consumer-grade mining hardware struggles to stay profitable even when revenue looks decent on paper.

What counts as a good pool fee?

Most reputable mining pools charge a 1โ€“2% fee on your payouts in exchange for smoothing your income versus solo mining, where a small miner might wait years to find a block alone. Fees above roughly 3% are on the high side for major pools โ€” compare a few before committing, since the fee comes straight out of your revenue before profit is calculated.

Does this calculator account for hardware depreciation or resale value?

No. The break-even figure only measures how long it takes your entered hardware cost to be repaid by profit at the current rate โ€” it does not model the hardware losing value over time, becoming obsolete as network difficulty rises, or any resale price you might recover later. Treat break-even as a floor, not a full return-on-investment picture.

Is crypto mining still worth it if this calculator shows a loss?

A negative result here means your current revenue does not cover electricity at today's numbers โ€” it does not mean mining is never worth it. Revenue moves with coin price and network difficulty, and electricity rates vary enormously by region. Recheck the numbers periodically, and see our full guide on whether mining is still profitable for the coins and conditions where it still works.

Sources

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