


Antminer DR7 (127Th)
Bitmain



iBeLink BM-S3+(25Th)
iBeLink



iBeLink BM S3 (19Th)
iBeLink



Goldshell SC6-SE (17Th)
Goldshell



Goldshell SC-BOX II (1.45Th)
Goldshell



Goldshell SC-BOX (900Gh)
Goldshell



Goldshell SC Lite (4.4Th)
Goldshell



Goldshell SC5 Pro II (14Th)
Goldshell



Goldshell SC5 Pro (11Th)
Goldshell



iBeLink BM S1 Max (12Th)
iBeLink



iBeLink BM S1 (6.8Th)
iBeLink
Best ASIC Miners for Siacoin
Every miner listed here is capable of mining Siacoin on the appropriate algorithm. Sort by daily net profit to find the most profitable Siacoin miner at your electricity rate, or filter by brand and stock to narrow the list.
How to pick the best Siacoin miner
- Rank by daily net profit at your real electricity rate, not raw hashrate — efficiency decides ROI.
- Factor in Siacoin network difficulty trend and expected price volatility when estimating payback.
- Check stock status: in-stock miners ship in 1–3 business days; back-ordered units take 2–4 weeks.
- Ask about hosting if home electricity is above $0.08/kWh — managed hosting often flips marginal miners back into profit.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best Siacoin miner to buy?
The best Siacoin miner depends on your electricity rate. The table above sorts every Siacoin-capable ASIC by live daily net profit — the top row is currently the most profitable choice given your rate input.
Is Siacoin mining still profitable?
Siacoin mining profitability varies with coin price, network difficulty, and your electricity cost. Use the live ranking plus your own electricity rate to see the current net profit for each miner before you buy.
What algorithm does Siacoin use?
Each miner card shows the algorithm it runs and the coins it can mine. Any ASIC listed on this page supports the Siacoin algorithm and can be pointed at a Siacoin pool out of the box.
How does Siacoin network difficulty affect my ROI?
Rising network difficulty lowers your daily revenue at constant hashrate, extending payback. Our profitability numbers reflect current difficulty — always build in a buffer for expected difficulty increases over the payback period.