Mining Pools vs Solo Mining
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Quick Answer
Once you own a miner, you face a fundamental choice: join a pool for small, steady payouts, or go solo and gamble for a rare but massive jackpot. The math is unforgiving and the answer depends entirely on how much hashrate you control. Here is how to decide.
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Solo mining is buying lottery tickets alone — you might win the whole jackpot, but probably never will. Pool mining is an office lottery syndicate — you pool tickets with thousands of others and split every win, so you get small, regular payouts instead of a near-impossible dream.
Why pools exist
A single home miner might statistically find a block once every several decades — wildly unpredictable. Pools combine the hashrate of thousands of miners; when the pool finds a block, it splits the reward by how much work each contributor provided. This turns a lottery into a steady wage.
Payout schemes
Common models: PPS (Pay Per Share) pays a fixed amount per share you submit, shifting variance risk to the pool for a fee; PPLNS (Pay Per Last N Shares) pays from actual blocks found, rewarding loyalty but with more variance. FPPS adds transaction-fee sharing. Each suits different miners.
When solo makes sense
Solo mining only makes sense if you control enormous hashrate, or you treat it as a pure lottery for fun (see lottery miners like Bitaxe). Tiny solo miners do occasionally hit a full block — a life-changing jackpot — but it is statistically a long shot.
The centralization risk
A downside of pools: if a few large pools control most hashrate, they gain outsized influence over the network. This is a real concern for Bitcoin’s decentralization, and newer protocols like Stratum V2 aim to give individual miners more control over what they mine.
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Pools combine many miners’ hashrate for small, steady payouts split by contribution (PPS, PPLNS, FPPS) — the practical choice for almost everyone. Solo mining is a high-variance lottery only sensible with huge hashrate or for fun. Pool concentration is a real decentralization risk.
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Several of the world’s largest pools are Asia-based, and many Asian miners rely on them for predictable income. Understanding payout schemes and centralization helps you choose a pool wisely — and appreciate why pool decentralization matters for Bitcoin’s health.
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Is solo mining worth it?▼
Only if you control very large hashrate, or you treat it as a lottery for fun. A small solo miner could theoretically hit a full block jackpot, but statistically it may take many decades. Most miners join a pool for steady income.
What is the best mining pool payout scheme?▼
PPS gives the most predictable income (the pool absorbs variance for a fee); PPLNS can pay more to loyal miners but with more swings; FPPS shares transaction fees too. The best depends on your risk tolerance and size.
Why is pool centralization a problem?▼
If a few pools control most hashrate, they could influence transaction selection or coordinate, weakening Bitcoin’s decentralization. Protocols like Stratum V2 aim to return block-building control to individual miners.