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Bitcoin Miners Approaching Breakeven Point Amid Price Drop

source-logo  u.today 14 November 2025 20:33, UTC
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Following Bitcoin's plunge below the $100,000 level, miners are finding it much more difficult to make money.

With electricity costing $0.06 per kWh, even those miners who use efficient mining machines (27.5 watts per terahash) are barely breaking even at around $97,000 per Bitcoin.

Machines that are less efficient or have higher electricity costs are already be losing money.

As $BTC falls below $100K, down 6% in the past 24 hours, mining revenue is under pressure.

At $0.06/kWh, mining machines with a unit power of 27.5 W/T are now running near breakeven around $97K/BTC.

View the full list here: https://t.co/IQ3u98NHsy pic.twitter.com/Y2ysJmmmyJ

— f2pool 🐟 (@f2pool_official) November 14, 2025

Which miners are still profitable?

The data provided by F2Pool shows a dramatic difference in profitability based on a miner's efficiency.

The most efficient hardware, such as the Antminer S21 XP Hyd. (12.0 W/T), has an electricity cost rate of only 43% of the current BTC price. This means it only needs Bitcoin to be at $41,585 to break even on electricity. This elite tier of hardware remains highly profitable at the current price level.

The other high-efficiency S21 models are close behind: all of them would manage to remain profitable with the Bitcoin price under $60,000.

In stark contrast, many older and less efficient machines are currently unprofitable.

For example, the Whatsminer M53 needs the price to be $100,694, and the Antminer S19 requires $118,641. The least efficient hardware on the list, the CopyMiner C7, needs an unsustainable price of $130,909 just to cover its electricity.

Bitcoin is currently changing hands at $95,290 following an enormous price plunge.

u.today