▶ Coinbase Website: Coinbase.com
▶ CEX Website: cex.io
Can you still mine Bitcoin at home in 2026? Technically, yes. You plug in an ASIC, join a pool, and you are mining in minutes. The honest problem is the electricity. At typical US home rates of 12 to 18 cents a kilowatt hour, you would produce a single Bitcoin for well over 100,000 dollars, while Bitcoin trades near 63,000. That is a loss every single day. The home-friendly options stay small: Monero on a CPU, or Litecoin and Dogecoin on a little Scrypt ASIC. Fun, not life-changing. And a real Bitcoin miner at home is loud, hot, and power-hungry, which is why most people quit inside a month. But mining itself is not dead. It just moved to cheap industrial power, and that is how people actually accumulate Bitcoin from mining. MillionMiner hosts miners across four US facilities, 95 megawatts total, from 7 cents per kilowatt hour, with a free 24-hour trial so you can mine without the garage. millionminer.com
▶ Coinbase Website: Coinbase.com
▶ CEX Website: cex.io
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