Binance Cloud Mining Profitability Calculator
Use this tool to estimate expected BTC output, daily net income, break-even day, and ROI for a Binance-style cloud mining contract.
How this Binance cloud mining calculator works
This calculator is designed for quick planning before buying a cloud mining contract. It estimates how much Bitcoin you could mine based on your hashrate share of the network, then converts that output into USD using your selected BTC price. After that, it subtracts pool fees and daily maintenance fees to estimate your net return.
The model is intentionally simple and transparent. Instead of hiding assumptions, it lets you control the key drivers of mining profitability: network competition, contract pricing, fee structure, uptime, and difficulty growth.
Core formula used
The first-day estimated Bitcoin mined is:
BTC/day = (Your TH/s ÷ Network TH/s) × 144 × Block Reward × Uptime
Where:
- Network TH/s is your input in EH/s converted to TH/s.
- 144 represents average Bitcoin blocks mined per day.
- Uptime accounts for real-world interruptions.
For multi-day contracts, the calculator reduces output over time using your monthly difficulty growth estimate. This reflects how higher network difficulty can lower your share of rewards in future months.
What each input means
Contract Cost (USD)
The upfront amount you pay for the cloud mining package. ROI and break-even are measured against this figure.
Your Hashrate (TH/s)
The mining power allocated to your contract. More hashrate means a larger share of mining rewards, all else equal.
Network Hashrate (EH/s)
A measure of total global mining competition. As this rises, your fixed hashrate earns less BTC per day.
Pool / Platform Fee and Maintenance Fee
These are often the biggest profitability killers. Even small fees can dramatically reduce long-term returns, especially if BTC price stays flat.
Difficulty Growth
This is one of the most important assumptions. If network difficulty grows faster than expected, the contract can move from profitable to unprofitable quickly.
How to use this calculator for better decisions
- Run a base case with realistic current data.
- Run a conservative case with lower BTC price and higher difficulty growth.
- Run an optimistic case with stronger BTC price and stable difficulty.
- Compare all three outcomes before committing capital.
If your contract only works in the optimistic case, risk is high. A stronger setup still shows acceptable returns in base and conservative scenarios.
Common mistakes investors make
- Ignoring maintenance fees in long contracts.
- Using today’s BTC price as if it is guaranteed for 12 months.
- Assuming network hashrate stays flat.
- Not checking if the contract has early termination clauses.
- Confusing gross mining revenue with net profit.
Final thoughts
A good Binance cloud mining calculator should not just show potential upside. It should show downside risk clearly. That is why this tool focuses on both revenue and cost, then gives you break-even timing and contract-level ROI.
Use it as a screening tool: if a contract fails under realistic assumptions, you can avoid poor decisions early. If it still looks solid after stress-testing, you can proceed with greater confidence and clear expectations.