Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
| Plan | Hashrate | Cost | Daily Fee | Length | Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter | 50 TH/s | $600 | $1.50 | 365 days | Low risk test |
| Growth | 100 TH/s | $1,000 | $3.00 | 365 days | Balanced projection |
| Advanced | 250 TH/s | $2,300 | $7.20 | 540 days | Longer exposure |
Formula Used
Daily blocks = 86,400 / average block time. Daily coins = contract hashrate / network hashrate × daily blocks × block reward × uptime × fee factor. Gross revenue = daily coins × coin price. Daily cash flow = gross revenue - maintenance - estimated tax - reinvested amount. Risk adjusted cash flow = daily cash flow × risk margin factor. Profit = total cash received - contract cost. ROI = profit / contract cost × 100.
How to Use This Calculator
Enter the rented hash power first. Select the correct unit. Add current network hashrate, block reward, block time, and market price. Then add contract cost, daily maintenance, fees, uptime, tax, risk margin, and growth assumptions. Press the calculate button. Review profit, ROI, break-even time, and the daily projection preview.
Cloud Mining Profit Guide
What This Tool Measures
Cloud mining looks simple from the outside. You buy hash power. A remote provider runs the machines. You receive a share of mined coins. Real profit is harder to judge. Fees, downtime, network growth, coin price moves, and contract limits can change the result quickly.
Why Assumptions Matter
This calculator gives a structured estimate. It compares your rented hashrate with the full network hashrate. That ratio gives your expected mining share. The tool then applies block reward, block time, pool fee, platform fee, uptime, and coin price. These values create the gross daily revenue.
Costs and Cash Flow
A strong estimate must include costs. Many cloud contracts charge a fixed purchase price. Some also include daily maintenance. The calculator subtracts those ongoing costs. It also lets you add tax, reinvestment, and a risk margin. These advanced inputs help you build conservative scenarios.
Network Growth Risk
Network growth is important. When more miners join a network, your rented power owns a smaller share. Your daily coin output may fall, even when your contract hashrate stays unchanged. Use the monthly network growth field to test this pressure before you buy.
Market Price Risk
Coin price is another major factor. A rising market can improve returns. A falling market can erase profit. The monthly price change field helps you compare optimistic, flat, and defensive cases. Do not rely on one perfect estimate.
Reading the Result
Focus on cash received, estimated profit, ROI, and break-even time. A contract may show mined coins but still lose money after fees. Break-even tells you when recovered cash equals the upfront cost. If break-even is not reached, the plan needs deeper review.
Smarter Planning
Use this calculator as a planning aid, not a guarantee. Check provider terms carefully. Verify payout rules. Compare several contract lengths. Run low, middle, and high price cases. A careful forecast can reduce surprises and support better decisions.
FAQs
1. What is cloud mining profit?
Cloud mining profit is the cash left after mining revenue, contract costs, maintenance fees, pool fees, platform fees, taxes, and risk adjustments are included.
2. Why does network hashrate affect profit?
Network hashrate shows total mining power. When it rises, your rented hashrate owns a smaller share. That can lower expected coin output.
3. What is the break-even day?
The break-even day is when total cash received equals the upfront contract cost. After that point, remaining positive cash may become profit.
4. Should I include maintenance fees?
Yes. Maintenance fees can strongly reduce returns. Always include daily charges, hosting charges, withdrawal fees, and any other recurring contract cost.
5. What does risk margin mean?
Risk margin reduces projected cash flow. It creates a conservative buffer for downtime, delayed payouts, price slippage, and provider uncertainty.
6. Can this calculator predict exact returns?
No. It estimates returns from your inputs. Real returns depend on market price, network activity, payout rules, fees, and provider performance.
7. Why add monthly price change?
Monthly price change helps test different market cases. You can compare flat, bullish, and bearish scenarios before choosing a contract.
8. Is cloud mining always profitable?
No. Some contracts lose money after fees and market changes. Compare break-even time, ROI, and provider terms before making a purchase.