Profitability & Strategy
How to Choose the Most Profitable Cryptocurrency to Mine
How to Choose the Most Profitable Cryptocurrency to Mine
Pick the coin that delivers the highest net return after your hardware and power costs. Start by listing your exact equipment and local electricity rate, then compare coins that your rig can actually hash.
Match Coins to Your Hardware
GPUs work best on memory-heavy algorithms like Ethash or KawPow. ASICs dominate SHA-256 coins. If you run two RTX 3070 cards, focus on coins such as Ravencoin or Ergo rather than Bitcoin. Running the wrong algorithm on your cards cuts output by half or more.
Calculate Power Costs First
Electricity usually eats 60 to 80 percent of mining revenue. Measure the wattage your rig pulls at the wall under load. At 0.10 dollars per kWh a 1200-watt rig costs 2.88 dollars per day. At 0.25 dollars per kWh the same rig costs 7.20 dollars. Subtract that number from projected daily coin value before you choose a target.
Check Network Difficulty and Block Rewards
- Higher difficulty spreads the same reward across more miners, so daily payout drops.
- Block rewards halve on schedule, which can turn yesterday’s profit into today’s loss.
- Look at the last 30 days of difficulty charts on a site like WhatToMine or the coin’s own explorer.
Compare Coins Side by Side
| Coin | Algorithm | Daily Revenue (3070 rig) | Power Cost at 0.12/kWh | Net Profit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ravencoin | KawPow | 3.40 | 2.10 | 1.30 |
| Ergo | Autolykos2 | 3.10 | 2.05 | 1.05 |
| Kaspa | kHeavyHash | 4.80 | 2.20 | 2.60 |
Update the numbers every few days because prices and difficulty move fast.
Run a Seven-Day Test Before Scaling
- Mine the top two coins from your table for 48 hours each.
- Record actual coins received and wallet payouts.
- Switch to the third coin for another 48 hours.
- Keep the rig on the winner and set a calendar reminder to recheck in one week.
Small differences in pool fees or stale shares often decide which coin stays ahead once you see real results.