Where Is Crypto Mining Cheapest?

Ask any serious miner what separates profitable operations from money-losing ones and the answer is almost always the same: electricity. Not hardware. Not firmware. Not pool fees. Electricity.
The global spread of OneMiners hosting locations — six countries across three continents — creates a practical real-world comparison for cost-of-mining analysis. Rates range from $0.04/kWh in Nigeria to $0.068/kWh in Texas. That gap sounds modest. At scale, it is the difference between building wealth and bleeding margin.
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Why Electricity Cost Is the Number That Dominates Everything
A modern high-efficiency miner like the S23 draws roughly 3,500W and delivers around 235 TH/s. Under current market conditions, the gap between $0.04/kWh and $0.12/kWh is not a minor efficiency tweak — it can completely reshape payback timelines and long-term ROI.
The US residential average sits near $0.12/kWh. Texas industrial power, often treated as one of the best domestic benchmarks, still lands around $0.068/kWh when curtailment incentives are factored in. That remains materially more expensive than the lowest-cost OneMiners facility.
Understanding why a location is cheap matters as much as the number itself. Low-cost power anchored in flare gas, hydro surplus, or nuclear baseload is structurally different from temporarily discounted or politically subsidized electricity. Operators who understand that distinction usually make better long-term hosting decisions.
The TOP Six Locations, Ranked by Electricity Rate
1. Nigeria — $0.04/kWh
Energy source: Natural gas (monetized flare gas) + solar hybrid
Unique advantages: Lowest rate in the network, zero-tax SEZ environment, natural gas arbitrage
Nigeria’s advantage is structural. The country has significant natural gas reserves and a long history of flaring gas that would otherwise be wasted. Turning that stranded energy into mining power creates one of the strongest cost positions in the global hosting market.
2. Ethiopia — $0.045/kWh
Energy source: Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (hydroelectric)
Unique advantages: Renewable certification, favorable FDI environment, lower cooling overhead
Ethiopia benefits from genuine hydro surplus. That gives the pricing more durability than temporary promotional energy contracts. For long-horizon miners, that difference matters.
3. Norway — $0.055/kWh
Energy source: Hydroelectric
Unique advantages: Renewable profile, cold-climate cooling, EU-adjacent legal stability
Norway is ideal for operators who care about clean-energy credentials and infrastructure reliability. It is not the absolute cheapest option, but it is one of the most defensible operational choices.
4. Finland — $0.06/kWh
Energy source: Nuclear + hydroelectric grid mix
Unique advantages: Heat recovery upside, predictable EU framework, district heating compatibility
Finland stands out because heat recovery can turn waste heat into economic value. That can push effective operating cost below the headline rate for the right setup.
5. UAE / Dubai — $0.065/kWh
Energy source: Grid power in zero-tax SEZ
Unique advantages: Zero corporate tax, zero capital gains, strong banking access, regulatory clarity
Dubai is not the cheapest power play. It is the strongest tax-efficiency and payout-infrastructure play for many operators running meaningful monthly Bitcoin output.
6. Texas / USA — $0.068/kWh
Energy source: ERCOT grid (wind, solar, natural gas), curtailment credits
Unique advantages: US legal jurisdiction, domestic proximity, curtailment-driven cost optimization
Texas remains the most compelling domestic option for US operators who need legal, accounting, or operational simplicity inside the United States.
Location Comparison Table
| Location | Rate ($/kWh) | Energy Source | Unique Edge | Renewable |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1Nigeria | $0.040 | Natural gas + solar | Flare gas arbitrage, lowest rate globally | Partial |
| #2Ethiopia | $0.045 | Hydroelectric (GERD) | Structural surplus, cool climate | Yes |
| #3Norway | $0.055 | 100% hydro | Carbon-conscious operations, cold climate | Yes |
| Finland | $0.060 | Nuclear + hydro | Heat recovery revenue, EU stability | Yes |
| UAE / Dubai | $0.065 | SEZ grid | Zero tax, banking access | No |
| Texas / USA | $0.068 | ERCOT (curtailment) | US jurisdiction, curtailment credits | Partial |
| US average home electricity: $0.120/kWh — reference benchmark | ||||
Monthly Profit Comparison: S23 Across All Locations
The Antminer S23 (235 TH/s, 3,500W) is used as the reference machine. These estimates are illustrative and should be checked against live BTC price, network difficulty, and pool assumptions.
| Location | Rate | Monthly Power Cost | Est. Monthly Gross | Est. Monthly Net |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nigeria | $0.040 | ~$100 | ~$380 | ~$280 |
| Ethiopia | $0.045 | ~$113 | ~$380 | ~$267 |
| Norway | $0.055 | ~$138 | ~$380 | ~$242 |
| Finland | $0.060 | ~$151 | ~$380 | ~$229 |
| UAE / Dubai | $0.065 | ~$163 | ~$380 | ~$217 |
| Texas / USA | $0.068 | ~$171 | ~$380 | ~$209 |
| US Home Avg | $0.120 | ~$302 | ~$380 | ~$78 |
The Nigeria-to-US-home delta is roughly $200 per machine per month. At 10 miners, that is about $2,000 monthly. At 50 miners, it becomes $10,000 monthly. The location choice compounds fast.

The Fixed Pricing Advantage: Seven Years of Rate Certainty
Most hosting contracts leave the operator exposed to future electricity repricing. When energy markets turn volatile, the miner absorbs that risk. A long fixed-rate structure changes the equation by making ROI forecasting more credible and by reducing the chance of margin compression after hardware is already deployed.
Why this matters in practice
- It gives operators more confidence in long-term ROI modeling.
- It reduces exposure to utility and landlord repricing risk.
- It makes capital deployment decisions less dependent on short-term energy market noise.
The 30% Discount: Why It Is So Important
A 30% hosting discount materially changes economics across every location. Applied to a $0.04/kWh Nigeria base rate, effective cost falls to approximately $0.028/kWh. Even the higher-cost locations become far more competitive under that same discount structure.
Free Miner Relocation = Real Optionality
Free relocation between facilities turns a hosting choice from a static commitment into a flexible strategy. That matters when regulations shift, tax priorities change, or a miner wants to rebalance between lowest cost and lower jurisdictional risk.
98% Uptime and Seven-Year Warranty
Low headline electricity cost is important, but operational reliability still matters. A compensated uptime guarantee and an unusually long hardware warranty reduce two common hidden costs in mining: lost production and equipment failure risk.
How to Choose the Right Location
Cost-first operators: Nigeria first, Ethiopia second.
ESG or renewable positioning: Norway or Finland.
Tax-efficiency focus: UAE / Dubai.
US-based legal simplicity: Texas.
Risk-spread fleets: Split across two or more locations and use relocation as a flexibility lever.
The Bottom Line
The difference between mining at $0.04/kWh and mining at $0.12/kWh is not incremental. It is foundational. OneMiners’ location mix is built around structurally advantaged power markets, and that shows up directly in net monthly results.
Add the long rate lock, relocation flexibility, uptime commitments, and extended warranty coverage, and the hosting proposition becomes more than just a price comparison. It becomes a risk-managed operating model.
The math is clear. The margin lives in the electricity price.
