
A miner is an individual who bundles transactions on a blockchain and earns rewards for doing so.
On networks like Bitcoin that utilize Proof of Work, miners deploy computing hardware and electricity to bundle transactions, compete for block production rights, and receive block rewards and transaction fees. In decentralized finance (DeFi), the term “miner” can also refer to users who provide assets to liquidity pools in exchange for token incentives.
Miners play a critical role in ensuring network security, confirming transactions promptly, and directly impacting transaction fee levels and the censorship resistance of your assets.
In the Bitcoin network, the greater the aggregate mining power, the harder it becomes to alter historical data, resulting in higher security. For regular users, understanding miner incentives and costs helps determine whether to wait during peak fee periods or increase fees for faster transaction confirmation.
For DeFi participants, “mining” often refers to depositing assets into a pool to earn rewards. Understanding both the sources of yield and associated risks—such as price volatility and impermanent loss—can prevent misconceptions about “mining” being risk-free passive income.
The mining process involves collecting unconfirmed transactions into a block and repeatedly attempting to find a hash value that meets the network’s difficulty target. This process is called Proof of Work; it relies on computational challenges to make block creation resource-intensive, deterring abuse and fraud.
It’s challenging for individual miners to consistently “win” block rewards, so most join mining pools—groups that combine their hash power to stabilize earnings and share rewards proportionally. Think of mining pools like lottery syndicates: pooling resources for more stable chances, then splitting rewards according to each participant’s contribution.
In terms of hardware, Bitcoin typically uses specialized mining machines optimized for a single algorithm, providing higher energy efficiency per unit of hash rate. Electricity cost is one of the largest expenses; profitability is most likely when combining efficient hardware with low electricity rates.
On major blockchains like Bitcoin, miners secure the network and select transactions, giving priority to those with higher fees during periods of congestion. On busy days, transaction fees can even surpass the block subsidy as the primary source of miner revenue.
Within mining pools, miners connect their equipment to pool servers; the pool assigns tasks, submits results, and handles reward distribution. Common payout systems allocate earnings based on valid work shares, reducing the volatility of individual miner income.
In DeFi, many platforms refer to activities like providing liquidity, market making, or staking tokens for rewards as “mining.” For example, in Gate’s liquidity mining, users deposit two assets into a trading pair’s pool and earn a share of trading fees plus platform incentives. Here, “miners” don’t need specialized hardware but must manage risks such as price volatility and impermanent loss.
If you participate in DeFi “mining,” you can reduce impermanent loss by choosing pools with lower volatility, shortening participation duration, entering or exiting in tranches, and monitoring platform contract audits and permission settings.
Over the past year, the Bitcoin network continued with the April 2024 halving; each block subsidy is now 3.125 BTC. For miners, coin price, transaction fees, and hardware efficiency are key factors for maintaining profitability.
Throughout 2024 and this year so far, network difficulty and total hash rate have repeatedly hit all-time highs—showing more devices coming online. During periods of intense activity or market swings, transaction fee revenue has at times exceeded the block subsidy, significantly boosting miner income during these spikes.
As for mining pool dynamics, top pools have collectively maintained over half of the total market share in the past year—a relatively high level of concentration. Joining a leading pool can offer more stable returns but may also increase governance and censorship risks due to centralization.
Ethereum transitioned to staking in 2022 and no longer has traditional miners. Legacy mining rigs have shifted to smaller Proof of Work chains or privacy-focused networks, where hash rate and earnings fluctuate more dramatically with market cycles.
Electricity costs remain the decisive factor for profit margins. In the past six months, miners with low power rates and efficient machines have shown greater resilience; those facing high energy costs or older hardware experience more frequent shutdowns or relocations.
You can track these trends via public dashboards throughout 2024 and over the past year—monitoring key moments like subsidy changes, difficulty peaks, and shifts in the proportion of income from transaction fees.
Miners typically refer to participants in Proof of Work (PoW) networks who compete for block production by dedicating computational power in exchange for rewards. Validators usually participate in staking-based networks by locking up tokens and being randomly selected to produce blocks and earn rewards.
Both roles are essential for ledger maintenance and network security but differ in cost structures: miners invest primarily in hardware and electricity, while validators stake tokens and risk slashing penalties. Understanding these distinctions helps users choose their preferred participation method.
Daily mining returns depend on your hash rate relative to total network difficulty. A solo small-scale miner might earn fractions of a coin per day; participants in large mining pools see more stable income. Actual earnings equal your hash rate divided by total network hash rate, multiplied by the number of new bitcoins issued that day (currently about 6.25 every 10 minutes).
Mining hardware mainly falls into two categories: ASIC miners (purpose-built for Bitcoin with maximum efficiency) and GPUs (used for Ethereum and other coins). ASIC miners are specialized but costly; GPUs are more versatile but less energy efficient. Choose equipment based on your target coin, electricity costs, and investment budget.
Running hardware at high loads for extended periods accelerates wear—especially reducing GPU lifespan. Mining generates significant heat requiring robust cooling; inadequate thermal management can damage chips. Regular maintenance—like dust removal—and budgeting for depreciation are essential when calculating potential profits.
Solo mining has high variability in returns and requires massive hash power for consistent payouts; pool mining aggregates resources from multiple miners for steadier income at the cost of a small fee. Most retail users participate via pools supported by platforms like Gate for balanced risk/reward exposure.
Mined coins are first sent to your wallet address; you can then transfer them to exchanges like Gate for trading or conversion into fiat currency. Before withdrawal, ensure your wallet address is secure and that enough network confirmations (typically six blocks) have occurred before selling or cashing out to your bank account.


