XMR CPU Mining Benchmark Calculator

Check CPU hash rate, power use, and mining returns. Compare fees, uptime, and market price. Review clear profit signals before upgrading hardware wisely today.

Calculator Form

Example Data Table

CPU Hash Rate Total Power Electricity Pool Fee Use Case
Ryzen 9 7950X 23000 H/s 200 W $0.12/kWh 1% High performance desktop rig
Ryzen 7 5800X 9500 H/s 140 W $0.12/kWh 1% Balanced home miner
Xeon Server CPU 14500 H/s 260 W $0.10/kWh 1.5% Used server comparison

Formula Used

The calculator estimates XMR rewards from hash rate, difficulty, block reward, uptime, pool fee, and share quality.

XMR per day =
(Hash Rate × 86,400 × Uptime Factor × Pool Fee Factor × Share Success Factor × Block Reward)
÷ Network Difficulty
Daily Energy Cost =
((CPU Watts + System Watts) × 24 × Uptime Factor ÷ 1000) × Electricity Cost
Daily Net Profit =
Daily Gross Revenue - Daily Energy Cost
Hash Per Watt =
Hash Rate ÷ Total Power Draw

How To Use This Calculator

  1. Run a stable RandomX benchmark on your CPU.
  2. Enter the measured hash rate in hashes per second.
  3. Add CPU watts and extra system power draw.
  4. Enter electricity price, XMR price, pool fee, and uptime.
  5. Use current network difficulty and block reward values.
  6. Press the calculate button.
  7. Review profit, efficiency, payback time, and break even cost.
  8. Download CSV or PDF results for future comparison.

XMR CPU Benchmark Guide

A mining benchmark gives a practical view of a processor before real spending begins. XMR mining depends on RandomX speed, steady uptime, and energy use. A fast hash rate is helpful. Yet profit can disappear when electricity is high. This calculator joins those values in one clean estimate.

Why Benchmarking Matters

The best input is a measured hash rate from your own system. Use a stable benchmark run, not a short burst. Short tests can hide heat throttling. Longer tests show realistic speed. Enter total processor power and extra system overhead. That overhead includes memory, motherboard, fans, storage, and power supply loss. The result then reflects the full rig, not the chip alone.

Understanding Network Inputs

Network difficulty controls how many hashes are needed for rewards. Block reward sets the coin amount paid per block. Price converts those coins into a fiat value. Pool fee and invalid shares reduce final payout. Uptime also matters. A rig that runs only part of the day earns less. The tool applies each factor before showing gross revenue, energy cost, and final profit.

Profit And Efficiency Signals

Efficiency is the most important benchmark signal. Hash per watt compares CPUs fairly. A processor with a lower hash rate can still win. It may use far less power. Break even electricity price shows the highest power rate you can pay. If your actual rate is higher, mining loses money. Payback days estimate how long hardware recovery may take.

Use Results Carefully

Use the result as a planning guide. It is not a promise of income. XMR price can move quickly. Difficulty can change as miners join or leave. Power meters can also reveal different wall draw. For better accuracy, update inputs often. Save each run as CSV or PDF. Then compare CPUs, settings, and undervolt profiles. Good records help you find the most stable and efficient setup.

Better Hardware Choices

This calculator is useful for hobby miners, hardware testers, and lab comparisons. It supports quick what if checks. Change one value at a time. Watch how profit, efficiency, and payback respond. That method makes upgrade choices clearer. It also reduces guesswork before buying new parts. Compare every CPU tested. Choose with care.

FAQs

What is an XMR CPU benchmark?

It is a test that measures how many RandomX hashes your processor can complete each second. Higher hash rate can improve rewards, but power use still matters.

Why does power draw affect profit?

Mining runs for long periods. Even a profitable hash rate can lose money when electricity cost is high or the system wastes power.

Should I enter CPU power only?

No. Add system overhead too. Memory, fans, motherboard, drives, and power supply losses can change the real wall power cost.

What does hash per watt mean?

Hash per watt measures efficiency. It shows how many hashes your system produces for each watt of power used.

Why is network difficulty important?

Difficulty estimates how hard it is to find blocks. Higher difficulty usually means the same CPU earns less XMR.

Does pool fee reduce rewards?

Yes. The calculator subtracts pool fee from estimated output. Rejected shares also reduce the effective payout estimate.

Is the profit result guaranteed?

No. It is an estimate. XMR price, network difficulty, uptime, heat, and power draw can change after calculation.

How can I compare two CPUs?

Run the same benchmark length for each CPU. Enter each result separately. Compare net profit, hash per watt, and payback time.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.