Cloud Mining Profitability Calculator
Estimate cloud mining profit with fees, difficulty, and payouts. Compare hash power plans before purchase. See break even, ROI, and contract risk clearly today.
Estimate cloud mining profit with fees, difficulty, and payouts. Compare hash power plans before purchase. See break even, ROI, and contract risk clearly today.
Enter contract, mining, fee, price, and network details. Use conservative numbers for safer planning.
This sample shows common planning inputs for a cloud mining contract.
| Input | Example Value | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Coin Price | $65,000 | Converts mined coins into estimated revenue. |
| Hash Rate | 100 TH/s | Shows the purchased mining power. |
| Contract Cost | $1,500 | Used to calculate net profit and ROI. |
| Maintenance Fee | $0.04 per TH/day | Deducts daily operating charges. |
| Difficulty Change | 3% monthly | Models rising or falling mining competition. |
The calculator estimates daily mined coins from network difficulty, block reward, block rate, and your purchased hash rate.
Network hash rate = Difficulty × 2^32 ÷ Block time
Daily coins = Miner hash rate ÷ Network hash rate × Block reward × Blocks per day × Uptime
Gross revenue = Daily coins × Coin price
Net payout = Gross revenue − Platform fee − Maintenance fee − Withdrawal fee − Tax − Reinvested amount
Net profit = Total cash payout − Contract cost
ROI = Net profit ÷ Contract cost × 100
Difficulty and coin price can change monthly. The tool converts those monthly changes into daily compounding rates. This gives a more realistic projection than using one fixed value for the whole contract.
Cloud mining profit is the remaining value after all costs. It is not the same as gross mining revenue. A contract may show high coin output, yet still lose money after service charges. This calculator separates revenue, fees, taxes, and contract cost. That helps you judge the real result.
Mining difficulty can change often. When difficulty rises, the same hash rate earns fewer coins. Many contracts look attractive only when difficulty stays flat. A safer estimate should test higher difficulty. This tool lets you add a monthly difficulty change. It then applies that change across each day of the contract.
Cloud mining plans usually include several costs. The first cost is the contract price. The second cost is maintenance. Some providers also charge platform fees, payout fees, or withdrawal fees. These deductions can reduce returns quickly. Small daily fees matter over long contracts.
Coin price has a major effect on profit. A higher price can improve ROI. A lower price can turn a good plan into a losing plan. The monthly price change field helps model optimistic, neutral, and conservative cases. You should compare several scenarios before buying hash power.
Break even shows when payouts recover the contract cost. If break even happens late, risk is higher. ROI shows the percentage return compared with your initial cost. A positive ROI is useful, but it should be judged with risk, provider trust, lockup period, and market volatility.
Do not rely only on advertised returns. Use lower uptime, higher difficulty, and realistic fees. This gives a safer estimate. Cloud mining can involve scams, delayed payouts, and contract changes. Always review provider history and terms before paying.
It estimates possible earnings from rented mining power. It compares mined coins, coin price, contract cost, maintenance charges, platform fees, taxes, and withdrawals. The result helps you see net profit, ROI, and break even before buying a plan.
No. Profit depends on coin price, mining difficulty, fees, uptime, and contract cost. Some contracts lose money even when coins are mined daily. Always test conservative scenarios before making a purchase.
Higher difficulty means more competition on the network. Your fixed hash rate then earns a smaller share of block rewards. This reduces daily coin output unless your hash power increases.
Break even day is the first day when total cash payouts equal or exceed your contract cost. If the calculator shows “Not reached,” the contract does not recover its initial cost during the selected term.
Yes, if mining income is taxable in your location. Tax can reduce final payout and ROI. This calculator includes a tax field so you can estimate after-tax returns more clearly.
It is the daily operating charge for each terahash of rented mining power. Providers may use different fee models. Check your contract terms and enter the closest matching daily value.
Coin price can move during the contract. The price change field helps you model bullish, neutral, or bearish markets. This makes the estimate more useful than one fixed price assumption.
No. It provides an estimate based on your inputs. Real results can differ due to price swings, difficulty changes, provider downtime, hidden fees, payout limits, and contract rules.
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.