Crypto mining in 2025: real earnings or a game of roulette?

From Theory to Practice: How Cryptocurrency Mining Works

Simply put, a mining farm is a specialized computing setup consisting of several graphics cards or professional ASIC devices. The equipment runs continuously, trying millions of combinations to find the correct hash that allows adding a new block to the blockchain network. When a block is successfully mined, the system awards a reward in cryptocurrency.

In practice, most miners join pools — collective networks where profits are distributed proportionally to the contributed hashing power. The largest pools today are F2Pool, Ethermine, ViaBTC, and AntPool. This approach ensures more stable income compared to solo mining.

Financial Calculations: How Much to Spend and Earn

The first question for any potential miner: what amount should I invest?

Initial investments depend on the type of equipment:

A home farm with 6 RTX 5090 graphics cards will cost about 1.1–1.3 million rubles. Each card costs 180–190 thousand ₽, plus motherboard, power supply, and rack.

Professional ASIC setups like WhatsMiner M60S (194 TH/s, 3600 W) start at 300 thousand ₽ each. A rack with 10 such devices requires an investment of 2.8–3.2 million rubles, including infrastructure.

Industrial containers with a capacity of 1 MW and 250–280 ASIC devices cost from 40 million rubles, including cooling, fire suppression, and monitoring systems.

Income calculations:

A farm with 6 RTX 3060 graphics cards generates $200–$400 monthly at electricity costs of up to 4 ₽/kWh.

A more powerful setup with 6 RTX 5090 cards produces $500–$700 per month under favorable conditions.

An ASIC farm with 5 WhatsMiner M60S can reach $1000 per month if industrial tariffs are used or equipment is placed in countries with cheap electricity.

Critical point: profitability sharply declines when electricity costs exceed 7 ₽/kWh. At such rates, most setups operate at a loss.

Ready-made Solution or DIY: Weighing the Alternatives

The market offers two entry schemes: purchasing a turnkey farm or assembling it yourself.

Turnkey farm — a fully configured system that only needs to be connected to power and the internet. Advantages are obvious: time-saving, technical support, warranty, remote monitoring. The downside — a price 20–40% higher than self-assembly, and less control over component quality. Dishonest sellers sometimes supply refurbished graphics cards or budget power supplies to increase their margin.

DIY assembly requires knowledge but saves money. You need to select compatible graphics cards, a motherboard with multiple PCIe slots, a powerful power supply (from 1200 W), memory, and storage. Software like HiveOS or RaveOS allows remote management.

Savings from DIY assembly are about 15–30%, but you should be prepared for a learning curve and possible mistakes.

Legality and Risks in Russia

In 2025, mining remains legal but strictly regulated. Home farms are not prohibited if using official connections and observing limits.

A critical threshold is 3900 kWh per month. Exceeding this automatically switches you to a higher tariff and attracts regulatory attention.

Legal consequences are real: unauthorized connection can lead to fines up to 1 million rubles and equipment confiscation. The Federal Antimonopoly Service has intensified inspections of private households with unusually high electricity consumption.

At the industrial level, registration as an individual entrepreneur (IP) or LLC is required, along with tariff calculations and compliance with fire safety standards. When registering as a self-employed individual, paying a 4–6% tax on income is sufficient.

Payback Periods: Realistic Expectations

Average payback for a GPU farm is 12–18 months under optimal conditions. ASIC equipment pays off faster — in 9–12 months.

However, these figures are approximate. Cryptocurrency price volatility, increasing network difficulty, rising electricity tariffs — all these factors can worsen the outlook.

Beginners often encounter dishonest calculators promising payback in 6–8 months, but they do not account for maintenance costs, equipment replacement, and price fluctuations. Such forecasts should be viewed skeptically.

Is it worth starting from scratch in the current cycle?

The simple answer: it depends on your situation.

Start if:

  • You have access to cheap electricity (up to 4 ₽/kWh)
  • You understand technical equipment
  • You are prepared for income fluctuations
  • You see mining as a long-term investment, not a quick way to get rich

Avoid if:

  • You live in regions with expensive electricity
  • You seek guaranteed passive income
  • You fear technical complexities and regulatory risks
  • You do not have 1–3 million rubles for initial equipment

In an era of increasing competition, success goes not to pioneers but to those who carefully calculate all costs, choose regions with favorable tariffs, and quickly adapt to changing network conditions. Before launching, conduct a detailed market analysis, study crypto trends, and honestly assess risks.

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