Find the maximum electricity rate your mining can sustain. Enter hash rate, revenue, and power to calculate the break-even price per kWh.
Every mining setup has a maximum electricity rate beyond which it becomes unprofitable. This calculator determines that threshold by comparing your daily mining revenue against your equipment's power consumption. If your electricity rate is below the break-even point, you're profitable; if it's above, you're losing money.
Knowing your break-even electricity rate is crucial for location planning, rate negotiations, and evaluating whether new hardware makes sense at your current power cost. It's also useful for understanding how much room you have before rising rates make your operation unviable.
Enter your mining revenue per day and your equipment's total power consumption to instantly see the maximum rate you can pay per kWh and still break even.
Crypto traders, long-term holders, and DeFi participants benefit from transparent mining break-even electricity rate calculations when planning entries, exits, or portfolio rebalances. Revisit this calculator whenever market conditions shift to keep your strategy grounded in accurate data.
The break-even electricity rate is the single most important metric for evaluating mining viability at a given location. It tells you the absolute maximum you can pay for power and still cover costs. Use it to compare locations, negotiate rates, and assess hardware purchases. Real-time recalculation lets you model different market scenarios quickly, so you can act with confidence rather than relying on rough mental estimates.
Daily kWh = Watts × 24 / 1000 Break-Even Rate = Daily Revenue / Daily kWh Profit Margin = ((Break-Even Rate − Actual Rate) / Break-Even Rate) × 100
Result: Break-even rate: $0.1923/kWh
With $15/day revenue and 3,250W power draw (78 kWh/day), the break-even rate is $15 / 78 = $0.1923/kWh. If you pay $0.10/kWh, you have a 48% margin. If you pay $0.15/kWh, you still profit but with only a 22% margin.
The break-even electricity rate is arguably the most important metric in mining economics. It determines which locations are viable, which hardware is worth buying, and when to shut down or relocate. Miners with low break-even rates (from efficient hardware and high coin prices) have the widest range of viable locations.
Never operate near your break-even rate. Difficulty increases, price drops, and unexpected costs can quickly push you below break-even. A healthy operation should have at least a 30% margin, which provides time to adjust if conditions deteriorate.
Use the break-even rate to evaluate hosting proposals, compare potential deployment locations, and decide when to retire old hardware. When a miner's break-even rate falls below available electricity rates, it's time to upgrade or decommission.
A 30-50% margin between your actual rate and your break-even rate provides a good buffer against difficulty increases, price drops, and unexpected costs. If your break-even is $0.15/kWh, paying $0.08/kWh gives you a 47% margin.
It changes with coin price, network difficulty, and block rewards. In volatile markets, check weekly. During stable periods, monthly is sufficient. Halving events cut the break-even rate roughly in half overnight.
If your electricity cost exceeds the break-even rate, every day of mining loses money. Options include: shutting down until conditions improve, relocating to cheaper power, upgrading to more efficient hardware, or switching to a more profitable coin.
This calculator focuses on operational break-even (revenue vs electricity). To include hardware amortization, subtract a daily hardware cost portion from your daily revenue before calculating.
As difficulty increases, your daily revenue drops (fewer coins for the same hash rate). This directly lowers your break-even rate. A 10% increase in difficulty reduces your break-even rate by approximately 10%.
This calculator works for any mining hardware. Enter the total wattage of your complete setup (ASICs, GPUs, supporting equipment, cooling) and your daily revenue. The break-even calculation applies equally.