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Crypto Mining Hosting Cost 2026: $/kWh, Fees & ROI

Bitcoin ASIC miner beside a glowing kilowatt electricity meter and stacked coins showing hosting cost

Crypto mining hosting costs $0.06–$0.08 per kWh all-in at most competitive facilities in 2026, which works out to roughly $180–$205 a month to run a single 3.5 kW ASIC. Electricity is 75–85% of the bill; setup fees, deposits and repairs make up the rest. Below is exactly what you pay, how to read a hosting quote, and how to estimate your return.

See live per-kWh rates by location. Bull Miners hosts your miner from $0.02/kWh — compare facilities and estimate your profit in the dashboard.

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The full cost breakdown

Item Typical 2026 cost How it’s charged
All-in electricity $0.06–$0.08 / kWh Per kWh used (the main cost)
Setup / racking $0–$150 per miner One-time
Security deposit 1–3 months hosting Refundable
Repairs Free–$ per incident Often free in the first year
Insurance (optional) Small monthly add-on Covers your hardware

What “all-in” really means

This is where people get burned. A facility may advertise a $0.05/kWh energy rate, then add demand charges ($10–$20 per kW per month), transmission and capacity fees, and a management margin — pushing the real number to $0.08–$0.10. Always ask for the all-in rate and a sample invoice. A single, honest per-kWh figure is the mark of a good host. Our crypto mining hosting services guide covers the red flags in detail.

A worked example

Take a 3.5 kW miner hosted at $0.07/kWh all-in:

  • 3.5 kW × 24 h × 30.4 days = ~2,554 kWh per month
  • 2,554 kWh × $0.07 = ~$179 per month in hosting
  • At $0.05/kWh that drops to ~$128; at $0.10 it rises to ~$256

That ±$0.01/kWh swing is ~$26 a month per machine — which is why the power rate, not the brand of facility, decides your margin. To see what a given miner could earn after power, use the profit estimate on the hosting app or our profit-per-day guide.

How to estimate your ROI

  1. Find the miner’s daily revenue at today’s price and difficulty (a mining calculator).
  2. Subtract daily hosting cost: kW × 24 × your $/kWh.
  3. That’s your daily net. Divide the machine price by monthly net for a rough payback in months.

Cheaper power shortens payback dramatically, which is why hosting in low-cost regions beats mining on home electricity. New to the hardware side? Start with our best Bitcoin miner buyer’s guide.

Hosting cost vs mining at home

Residential power runs $0.15–$0.30/kWh in most of the UK and Europe — two to four times a good hosting rate. Add the noise (~75 dB), heat, and breaker trips, and the case for hosting is mostly about cost. If you’re weighing the options, read hosted mining vs cloud mining and how hosting works.

FAQ

How much does it cost to host one miner per month?

Roughly $130–$205 for a typical 3.5 kW ASIC, depending on whether your all-in rate is $0.05 or $0.08 per kWh.

What is a good crypto mining hosting price?

Anything in the $0.06–$0.08/kWh all-in range is competitive in 2026. Below $0.05 is excellent; above $0.085 is close to break-even for most hardware.

Are there hidden fees in mining hosting?

Sometimes — demand charges, transmission and management fees can hide behind a low “energy” rate. Always confirm the all-in figure and request a sample invoice.

Does hosting include repairs?

Many hosts include basic repairs (often free in the first year). Confirm the repair turnaround and whether equipment insurance is available.

Compare real rates and start mining. See Bull Miners hosting prices →

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