Mining 101: Why Small Miners Rarely Win Solo Blocks

A LOT of beginners are told:

“Just get a USB miner — you might win a whole block!”

That sounds exciting, but here’s the truth:

Your chance of winning a solo block with small hardware is almost zero.

This lesson explains why — in plain English — and gives you realistic expectations so you can mine smarter, safer, and without false hopes.

What Does It Mean to “Win a Block”?

Miners compete to solve a cryptographic puzzle. Whoever solves it first gets:

When you mine solo, you only get paid if YOU personally find a block. There are no partial payouts, no daily income, no sharing with others.

Your Miner Is Like a Lottery Ticket Printer

Solo mining is like having a machine that prints lottery tickets extremely fast. The more tickets you print:

The network prints trillions of tickets every second.

If your miner prints a few million per second, you're not competing — you're spectating.

Comparing Hashrates: Tiny vs. The Entire Network

Here’s a real-world example:

In words:

Your USB miner is a tiny water drop in an ocean measured in galaxies.

In percentages:

A USB miner contributes about 0.00000000005% of the total network.

Meaning:

Why Difficulty Makes Solo Mining Even Harder

Bitcoin adjusts its difficulty every ~2 weeks so that one block is found every 10 minutes.

When more big miners join the network, difficulty goes up.

Higher difficulty = smaller chance of you finding a block.

And difficulty has been rising for years due to:

“But Some People Win With Small Miners!”

True — every few months, someone wins a block with 1 or 2 TH/s.

But here’s what the headlines don’t say:

It’s not skill. It’s not strategy. It’s statistical noise — like someone winning the lottery.

Millions of solo miners may try… and one person gets incredibly lucky.

You don’t see the thousands of others who mined for years and got nothing.

How Long Would It Take to Win a Block?

To understand how unrealistic solo mining is, consider:

Expected time means “average guess.” You could get it on day one… or after 3,000 years.

Most beginners dramatically underestimate what “rare” means.

Why Pools Exist: They Turn Luck Into Predictability

Pools combine the hashrate of thousands of miners. Together, they find blocks frequently. Then they split the rewards.

Pools convert random luck into steady, reliable payouts.

With a pool:

That’s why **solo mining is a gambling strategy**, not a mining strategy.

If you want to mine realistically, you need a pool. That’s why we built:

Mining Pool Selector Tool

Why the “One-Shot Miner” Trend Is Misleading

Many beginners buy USB or micro-miners thinking:

Companies use the rare “solo win” stories to sell tiny miners.

But mathematically:

Small miners are fine for education — but not block rewards.

The Honest Answer: Should You Solo Mine?

You SHOULD solo mine if:

You SHOULD NOT solo mine if:

A Simple Rule of Thumb

If you have to ask whether you might win a block… you almost certainly won’t.

If you're serious about mining:

Mining is a long-term strategy, not a slot machine.

Continue Learning