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Recently, I was researching how to mine cryptocurrencies with my PC, and I was surprised to discover that there are still viable options in 2026. Obviously, mining Bitcoin at home is a thing of the past with ASICs, but there are other coins that remain accessible if you have a good graphics card.
The truth is, if you want to avoid trading volatility but still want to participate in crypto, setting up a small home mining operation can be interesting. That said, be careful with cloud mining: every offer I've seen is pure fraud.
DOGECOIN: The Classic
I started researching Dogecoin. Although it started as a meme, it became something serious. Currently, it’s around $0.09 with a market cap of $13.96B. The interesting thing is that DOGE generates new coins every year, unlike Bitcoin, so there’s a constant incentive to mine. To mine DOGE, you need a wallet first, then you can use CPU miner if you’re using a processor, although it’s slow. If you want real speed, you need an AMD or Nvidia GPU. The recommended software is cgminer or cudaminer. Honestly, joining a mining pool like MultiPool makes much more sense than solo mining.
ETHEREUM CLASSIC: The Alternative
ETC is interesting because when Ethereum migrated to proof of stake in 2022, all GPU miners moved to ETC. It’s now at $8.16 with a $1.28B market cap. You can mine it with ASIC machines but it also works on normal desktops. The ETC network was designed to be more accessible than ETH.
MONERO: For Privacy
If privacy matters to you, Monero is your option. It’s at $337.70 with a $6.23B cap. The great thing is that the network was specifically designed to resist ASICs, so your home PC has a real chance. Download the official GUI client, install MultiMiner or other compatible software, and you’re set. It’s one of the easiest to start with.
ZCASH and Other Options
ZCash uses Equihash and is ASIC-resistant, so GPUs work well. It’s now at $366.86 with a $6.11B market cap. The process requires downloading the full blockchain and syncing, which takes time, but afterward it’s straightforward. Ravencoin with its KAWPOW algorithm is also accessible, currently at $0.01. Bitcoin Gold also uses Equihash, although the project has been quiet lately.
Other Interesting Coins
Horizen (ZEN) at $5.00 uses Equihash and is mineable with GPU. Grin is more experimental, using MimbleWimble and doing hard forks every six months to avoid ASICs. Vertcoin is popular among small miners because of its simplicity; it’s literally a one-click start. Bytecoin is another anonymous option but with very low volumes.
The Reality of the Numbers
If you want to know if it’s really worth it, you need to consider your hashrate and electricity costs. An RTX 3090 or 3080 costs between $600 y $2000, but they generate much higher hashrates. The site WhatToMine has a calculator to estimate actual profits.
Profitability depends on three things: the price of the coin you’re mining, your electricity cost, and your GPU’s hashrate. In the U.S., the average is 16 cents per kWh, but it varies a lot. Idaho is at 7.99 cents, while Hawaii is at 43.18 cents.
Someone I know has 13 machines with 8 GPUs each. They use AMD RX580s, which generate $20 daily before electricity, or 5700 XT that produce 30% more with the same power consumption. During a bear market, they barely made $500 monthly after electricity, but in a bull market, they reached $17,000 monthly. The thing is, each is a 1000-watt heater, so good cooling is necessary.
My Conclusion
If you have a decent GPU and cheap electricity, mining cryptocurrencies with my PC still makes sense in 2026. Don’t expect to get rich, but it’s a more interesting way than trading if you don’t want to stare at charts all day. The key is to carefully calculate whether your energy costs allow for real profitability, because that’s the factor that kills most home operations. And please, avoid any cloud mining schemes promising easy profits.