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Some miners compare pools by headline fee first, but that can be a costly shortcut. A pool with a lower advertised fee can still pay worse if its payout model, fee treatment, and transparency are weaker. This article shows what miners should compare before joining a pool.
When I started mining Bitcoin at home in 2019, I picked my pool based on one thing: the fee percentage. Lower fee, more sats in my wallet. Simple math. Back then the pool was hitting multiple blocks a day and payouts felt constant. Over the next few years, that changed. The same pool started taking longer and longer to find blocksâââwhat used to be several a day became one every few weeks. It wasnât until I started looking at what was actually going on under the hood that I realized the fee was only a small part of what determined my experience.
Pool selection touches everythingâââhow often you get paid, how predictable your income is, whether youâre getting your share of transaction fees, and how much you can actually see about whatâs happening with your hashrate. Whether youâre running a single Bitaxe from your desk or a garage full of S21s, these are the things worth understanding before you commit your machines.
This is the big one. Most non-solo pools use one of three payout structures, and the difference between them matters more day-to-day than any fee percentage.
FPPS (Full Pay Per Share) pays you for every valid share your miner submits, regardless of whether the pool actually finds a block. The pool absorbs all the luck risk. Your payouts are steady and predictableâââyouâll see sats accumulating in your account hourly, and the consistency makes you feel genuinely connected to the process. The tradeoff is that FPPS pools typically charge higher fees (often 2â4%) to compensate for the variance theyâre taking on.
PPS+ (Pay Per Share Plus) is similar to FPPS in that you get paid per share for the block subsidy portion, but transaction fee revenue is distributed based on the poolâs actual luck. Itâs a middle groundâââmore predictable than PPLNS, slightly less consistent than pure FPPS.
PPLNS (Pay Per Last N Shares) only pays out when the pool finds a block, and your share depends on how much work you contributed in the window before that block was found. PPLNS can technically pay more over time because the poolâs fees are usually lower. But as I mentionedâââthatâs the structure I was on at home when my payouts went from daily to biweekly to basically random. When I switched to FPPS, the difference was immediate. Consistent payouts, sats stacking every hour, and a sense that my machines were actually doing something.
When I mined on a smaller PPLNS pool, I could go eight or nine days with nothing, then get a payout worth two weeks of work in a single shot. On FPPS, I was pulling in roughly the same number of sats every day. Over a month, the totals were comparable, but the experience was completely different.
Personally, I currently mine on Braiins Pool using FPPS and pair it with Braiins firmware on my ASICs to squeeze out better efficiency. Braiins OS normally includes a dev fee, but if you use Braiins Pool, the pool fee is rebated, so the two are designed to work together.
For someone running a handful of machines at home, FPPS is often the better fit. The slightly higher fee can be worth paying for protection against the kind of variance that makes mining feel random and frustrating.
When a pool finds a block, the reward includes both the block subsidy (currently 3.125 BTC) and whatever transaction fees were attached to the transactions in that block. During busy mempool periods, those fees can add up to a meaningful percentage of the total reward.
Some pools share that transaction fee revenue with miners transparently. Others keep it, or distribute it in ways that arenât easy to verify. A pool advertising a 1% fee may still leave you worse off than a pool charging 2.5% if transaction fees are not shared transparently. Thatâs why the headline fee is only one part of the comparison.
Itâs worth reading the fine print. If a poolâs documentation doesnât clearly explain how transaction fees are handled, thatâs telling you something.
Larger pools find blocks more frequently because they control more of the networkâs hashrate. That means your payouts come in smaller, more regular increments. Smaller pools find blocks less often, but each payout is larger. Over a long enough timeline the math roughly evens outâââbut âlong enoughâ can mean months, and most of us check our dashboards far more often than that.
For solo miners running low-hashrate hardware like a Canaan Nano 3S, the math is completely different. Youâre not necessarily joining a traditional pool for fractional payouts. Youâre pointing your machine at a solo mining poolâââPublic Pool, CK Solo Pool, or similarâââand every valid hash is your own shot at a full block reward. The odds are tiny, but thatâs the game.
The Canaan Avalon Nano 3S runs at up to 6 TH/s on roughly 140W, with Wi-Fi connectivity. Itâs a low-power ASIC intended for small-scale, at-home mining. Available from altairtech.ioNeither approach is wrong. Theyâre just different experiences with different expectations.
If I were setting up a new miner today and choosing a pool from scratch, hereâs what Iâd want to know before pointing any machine at it.
First, the payout structureâââFPPS, PPS+, or PPLNSâââand whether it matches how I want to experience my mining income.
Then whether the pool shares transaction fees, and how transparently they report it. Iâd look at the dashboard and reporting tools, because being able to see your hashrate, earnings, and share submissions in real time is part of what makes mining satisfying rather than frustrating. Minimum payout thresholds matter too, especially for smaller minersâââsome pools wonât pay out until youâve accumulated a certain amount, which can mean waiting longer than youâd like.
And finally, reputation and uptime. A pool that goes down for maintenance during a difficulty adjustment or a fee spike is costing you money you canât get back.
The good news is that switching pools is straightforward. You change the stratum URL and worker credentials in your minerâs configuration, and within minutes your hashrate is pointed somewhere new. Most miners try a few pools before settling on the one that fits their setup and preferences.
The goal isnât to find the âbestâ pool in some absolute sense. Itâs to find the one that matches your hardware, your expectations, and the way you want to interact with the network. Start somewhere reasonable, pay attention to what your dashboard is telling you, and adjust from there. A full list of active Bitcoin mining pools is available at miningpoolstats.stream/bitcoin.
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â¶ïž New to mining? Hereâs a hands-on guide to mining Bitcoin at homeâââfrom choosing hardware to realistic expectations for your first month.
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Originally published at https://orangehorizonbtc.com on April 3, 2026.
Choosing a Bitcoin Mining Pool in 2026 was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


