How To Mine Bitcoin At Home

This article focuses on establishing a timeline of recent mining-related events, the economics of mining at home for the average U.S. resident, some speculation on the economical future limits and some steps you can take to start mining non-KYC bitcoin at home.

If you’re familiar with my other work, you know that I do not write about bitcoin price action, however, price action is relevant in this case because electricity bills are paid in fiat. Decoupling the economics of bitcoin mining from fiat conversion abstracts the subject too much to be useful for a wide audience, in my opinion. I try to keep it limited to only the relevant events and chart comparisons to demonstrate my point.

A Recent Bitcoin Mining Event Timeline

This has been an interesting year for Bitcoin with many notable events such as Whirlpool unspent capacity reaching an all-time-high, Taproot activation, El Salvador adoption, Craig Wright suing Bitcoin.org and the deaths of Mircea Popescu and John McAfee. Additionally, the network hash rate and trading price both hit all-time-highs followed by more than 50% pull backs. As turbulent as conditions were at times, this year has also been full of opportunity for those who were prepared.

On the surface, 2021 may not appear as a good time to start mining Bitcoin, but I’m going to explain why I think this is a good time to start a small, modest Bitcoin mining operation at home with the intent of dollar-cost averaging (DCAing) non-KYC bitcoin through your electricity bill. Aside from the events mentioned above, just zooming in on the mining sector is a rabbit hole all its own.

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