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Best Countries to Mine Crypto in 2026 (Cheapest Power)

Glowing world map globe with red location pins marking the best countries to mine crypto, flanked by Bitcoin mining server racks

The best countries to mine crypto in 2026 are the ones with cheap, abundant, and politically stable electricity — led by Paraguay, Norway, Iceland, Ethiopia, the United States (Texas and Wyoming), and the UAE. Power is 80%+ of a miner’s running cost, so the country you mine in decides whether you profit. Here’s where electricity is cheapest in 2026, which places to avoid, and how to mine there without relocating a single machine.

“In 2026 it takes roughly 854,400 kWh of electricity to mine one Bitcoin globally.” — Hashrate Index, Top Bitcoin Mining Countries of 2026. At $0.05/kWh that’s about $42,000 of power per coin; at $0.15 residential it’s over $128,000. The gap is the whole game.

What makes a country good for crypto mining?

  • Cheap industrial power — ideally $0.03–$0.06/kWh.
  • Surplus or stranded energy — hydro, geothermal, flared gas, or wind that would otherwise be wasted.
  • Cool climate — less spent on cooling and longer hardware life.
  • Stable rules — no sudden bans, blackouts, or sanctions.

The best countries to mine crypto in 2026

Country ~Industrial power Energy source Why it stands out
Paraguay ~$0.03/kWh Hydro (Itaipú surplus) Some of the lowest marginal power on earth
Norway ~$0.04/kWh 96% hydro Cheap, cold, green and stable
Iceland ~$0.05/kWh Geothermal/hydro (92% renewable) Natural free cooling year-round
Ethiopia ~$0.04/kWh Hydro Fastest-growing market; watch political risk
USA (Texas, Wyoming) ~$0.045–$0.07/kWh Mixed + flexible grid Largest market; paid demand-response programs
UAE / Oman ~$0.05/kWh Gas/solar Pro-business, fast scaling
Kazakhstan ~$0.04/kWh Coal/gas Cheap, though grid pressure has tightened rules

Iran and Libya are technically cheaper (Iran’s subsidised power is famously near $0.002/kWh), but sanctions, instability, and confiscation risk make them no-go zones for most miners. Cheap power means nothing if your rigs get seized.

The catch: you don’t have to move there

Here’s what most guides miss. You can’t plug an Antminer into Paraguay’s grid from your living room in London or Berlin — but you can have your miner hosted there. Hosting is how ordinary miners access these countries’ electricity prices. You buy the machine, a facility in Norway, Iceland, Ethiopia or the US runs it, and the coins mine straight to your wallet.

Mine where power is cheapest — without moving. Bull Miners hosts your ASIC in low-cost facilities across Norway, Iceland, Ethiopia, Paraguay, the US and more, from $0.02/kWh. Pick a country, keep 100% of your coins.

Choose a hosting country →

Where you should NOT mine

  • Your home, on residential power. At $0.12–$0.30/kWh, most home setups lose money after the 2024 halving.
  • Sanctioned or unstable states. Iran, Russia and similar carry seizure and payment risk.
  • Anywhere with a mining ban or moratorium (e.g., parts of New York for fossil-fuel-powered mining).

FAQ

Which country has the cheapest electricity for mining?

Iran and Libya have the cheapest subsidised power, but they’re high-risk. Among practical, stable options, Paraguay (~$0.03/kWh hydro) leads, followed by Norway and Ethiopia.

Can I mine in another country without living there?

Yes — through hosting. Your miner is racked in a facility abroad and mines to your own wallet. It’s the standard way to access cheap-power countries. See how Bitcoin mining hosting works.

Is the US a good place to mine in 2026?

Yes. Texas and Wyoming combine cheap power with demand-response programs that pay miners to curtail during peak demand, plus mining-friendly tax rules.

Related reading

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