Here’s the thing: I’ve been solo mining for about a year now, and I kept hearing people say “you need your own node” or “solo mining is too complicated for beginners.” Then I found HeroMiners and realized that’s not true at all. You can literally solo mine dozens of different coins using their infrastructure — no node setup, no blockchain sync, just point your miner and go.
HeroMiners lets you solo mine using pool-like infrastructure. That means you get all the fun of hunting for a full block reward, but without the technical headache of running your own node for every single coin you want to try. Pretty genius, honestly.
What Makes HeroMiners SOLO Mining Different
Most mining pools split rewards among everyone. You mine for eight hours, you get your tiny slice of whatever blocks the pool found. Predictable but boring.
HeroMiners offers something way more interesting: SOLO ports on almost every coin they support. You connect to their solo port, and if YOUR miner finds a block, YOU get the entire reward minus a small pool fee (typically 1.5%). The pool just provides the infrastructure — the node, the stratum server, the blockchain connection.
I love this setup because it removes the biggest barrier to solo mining altcoins. Want to solo mine Ravencoin today and Ergo tomorrow? Just change your mining software configuration. No downloading 50GB blockchains, no learning different node software for every coin.
The technical term for this is “pool-assisted solo mining” or “infrastructure solo mining.” You’re still solo mining (you either find a block or you don’t), but someone else handles the boring technical stuff.
HeroMiners Solo Mining Pool Setup Guide
Setting up solo mining on HeroMiners is actually simpler than regular pool mining in some ways. You don’t need to create an account or set payment thresholds — you just need your wallet address.
Basic connection format:
- Server: solo-COIN.herominers.com
- Port: Varies by coin (usually SSL ports like 1111, 10100, etc.)
- Username: YOUR_WALLET_ADDRESS
- Password: x (or any random text)
That’s it. No worker names required, though you can add them with a dot notation if you want (like WALLET.worker1). The pool doesn’t care because you’re solo mining — if you find a block, it goes straight to that wallet address.
What I wish I knew earlier: Always test with a small amount of hashrate first. I once misconfigured my wallet address (copied it with an extra space) and mined for six hours before noticing. In solo mining, that’s not a huge deal since you probably wouldn’t have found a block anyway, but it still felt dumb.
Example Configuration for Different Mining Software
For T-Rex Miner (NVIDIA GPUs) mining Ravencoin solo:
t-rex -a kawpow -o stratum+ssl://solo-rvn.herominers.com:10240 -u YOUR_RVN_WALLET -p x
For TeamRedMiner (AMD GPUs) mining Kaspa solo:
teamredminer -a kas -o stratum+tcp://solo-kas.herominers.com:1206 -u YOUR_KAS_WALLET -p x
For lolMiner mining Alephium solo:
lolMiner --algo ALEPHIUM --pool solo-alph.herominers.com:1199 --user YOUR_ALPH_WALLET
Most HeroMiners coins support both SSL (encrypted) and non-SSL connections. The SSL ports are slightly higher in number. I usually go with SSL because why not — it’s not noticeably slower and adds a tiny bit of security.
Which Coins Can You Solo Mine on HeroMiners
This is where HeroMiners really shines. They support solo mining on something like 30+ different coins. Not all of them are worth your electricity, but the variety is amazing.
GPU-mineable coins with solo ports:
- Ethereum Classic (ETC) — EtHash algorithm
- Ravencoin (RVN) — KawPoW algorithm
- Ergo (ERG) — Autolykos algorithm
- Kaspa (KAS) — kHeavyHash algorithm
- Alephium (ALPH) — Blake3 algorithm
- Flux (FLUX) — ZelHash algorithm
- Nexa (NEXA) — NexaPow algorithm
- Firo (FIRO) — FiroPow algorithm
- Neoxa (NEOX) — KawPoW variant
- Clore.ai (CLORE) — KawPoW variant
They also support some ASIC-mineable coins like Litecoin, but honestly? Solo mining Bitcoin or Litecoin with ASICs makes more sense on dedicated services. HeroMiners works best for GPU mining altcoins where the difficulty is reasonable enough that you have a chance.
My favorite coins for solo mining on HeroMiners: Kaspa and Ravencoin. Kaspa has fast blocks (one per second), so you feel like you’re always close to finding one. Ravencoin has one-minute blocks and reasonable difficulty if you have decent GPU hashrate.
Coins I Wouldn’t Solo Mine (Even on HeroMiners)
Let’s be honest. Just because you CAN solo mine something doesn’t mean you should.
Ethereum Classic is probably too difficult for solo mining unless you have a warehouse full of GPUs. Current network hashrate is around 180 TH/s. Unless you’re pushing at least 10 GH/s (that’s like 150 RTX 3090s), your odds are brutal.
Similarly, Monero solo mining on their RandomX port — sure, you can do it, but CPU solo mining is mostly a lottery ticket for people who want the experience, not the earnings. The difficulty is just too high.
HeroMiners Solo Mining Fees and Payout Structure
HeroMiners charges 1.5% pool fee on their solo ports. That means if you find a block worth 5,000 RVN, you receive 4,925 RVN directly to your wallet.
That’s higher than typical pool fees (usually 1%), but way lower than what some dedicated solo mining services charge. And considering they’re running the entire node infrastructure for you, I think it’s fair.
Payout is automatic and immediate. The second your miner finds a valid block, the reward (minus 1.5%) goes to your wallet address as part of the coinbase transaction. No minimum payout threshold, no waiting 24 hours for the pool to process payments. You find it, you get it.
This is one reason I prefer pool infrastructure solo mining over running my own nodes. With your own node, you still have to configure payout addresses, understand coinbase transactions, deal with immature balances. HeroMiners does all that automatically.
The Honest Math: What Does 1.5% Really Cost You?
Let’s say you’re solo mining Ravencoin. Current block reward is 2,500 RVN (worth roughly $0.005647 × 2,500). HeroMiners takes 1.5%, which is 37.5 RVN per block you find.
That fee covers: running a full Ravencoin node, maintaining stratum servers, handling blockchain sync, providing monitoring stats, and uptime infrastructure. If you tried to run all that yourself, you’d need a decent VPS (at least $20/month) plus your time learning the setup.
So unless you’re planning to find multiple blocks per month, the 1.5% fee is way cheaper than DIY.
Understanding Your Solo Mining Odds on HeroMiners
This is the part everyone wants to know: what are my actual chances?
Your odds of finding a block depend on three things:
- Network hashrate — how much mining power is securing the coin
- Your hashrate — how much power you’re contributing
- Block time — how often blocks are found
Basic formula: Expected time to find a block = (Network hashrate ÷ Your hashrate) × Block time
Let me give you a real example from my own mining. I have two RTX 3060 Ti cards that do about 93 MH/s combined on KawPoW (Ravencoin). Ravencoin network hashrate is around 7 TH/s, with 1-minute blocks.
My math: (7,000,000 MH/s ÷ 93 MH/s) × 1 minute = 75,269 minutes = about 52 days expected time to find one block.
Does that mean I find exactly one block every 52 days? Nope. That’s the average. Sometimes you find one in a week. Sometimes you go four months. That’s variance, and it’s the core of solo mining.
If you want better odds, you have three options: mine a coin with lower network hashrate, add more GPUs, or accept that solo mining is partly a lottery. I do option three because I can’t afford more hardware and I enjoy the thrill.
Realistic Odds for Common GPU Hashrates
Mining Kaspa (KAS) with 1 TH/s:
Network hashrate: ~300 PH/s (yes, petahash)
Block time: 1 second
Expected time: About 3.5 days per block
Mining Ravencoin (RVN) with 500 MH/s:
Network hashrate: ~7 TH/s
Block time: 1 minute
Expected time: About 9.7 days per block
Mining Ergo (ERG) with 5 GH/s:
Network hashrate: ~70 TH/s
Block time: 2 minutes
Expected time: About 19.4 days per block
These are estimates based on current difficulty. The numbers change constantly — more miners join, difficulty goes up, your odds get worse. That’s something you have to accept.
HeroMiners Dashboard and Solo Mining Statistics
One thing I really appreciate about HeroMiners: their stats dashboard actually works properly for solo mining.
Go to the coin’s homepage (like herominers.com/rvn), enter your wallet address in the search box, and you’ll see:
- Current hashrate — what your rigs are delivering to the pool
- Total shares submitted — how much work you’ve done (doesn’t matter for payout, but fun to watch)
- Workers online — how many rigs you have connected
- Blocks found — the only stat that actually pays you
Don’t make my mistake: I spent my first two weeks obsessing over “shares submitted” numbers. In solo mining, shares mean nothing. You either find the winning share (a block) or you don’t. All other shares are just proof your miner is working.
The dashboard updates every 30-60 seconds. Your hashrate might fluctuate a bit, which is normal. As long as the average is close to your GPU’s expected hashrate, everything is fine.
Setting Up Monitoring Alerts
HeroMiners doesn’t have built-in email alerts (at least not for solo mining), so I use a simple monitoring script that checks my hashrate every 10 minutes. If it drops to zero, the script sends me a Telegram message.
You can also use services like MiningPoolStats or Foreman to monitor multiple HeroMiners coins at once. Just add your wallet addresses and the site tracks your hashrate across all of them. Pretty handy if you’re switching between coins frequently.
Alternative Solo Mining Services: How HeroMiners Compares
HeroMiners isn’t the only service offering pool infrastructure for solo mining, so let’s be fair about the competition.
K1Pool — Supports 50+ coins with solo mining ports and way more exotic options. Fees are similar (1.5%). If you want maximum coin variety, K1Pool wins. Check out our complete K1Pool solo mining guide for details.
Solo.CKPool.org — The OG Bitcoin solo mining pool. Zero fees, super transparent, Bitcoin only. If you’re solo mining BTC, this is honestly better than HeroMiners. Read our Solo.CKPool.org guide for setup instructions.
Mining-Dutch — Offers solo ports for various coins. Lower fees (1%) but way less reliable in my experience. I tested them for three weeks and had more downtime than with HeroMiners.
HeroMiners sits in a sweet spot: good coin variety, reliable infrastructure, reasonable fees. It’s not the absolute cheapest or the most feature-packed, but it’s solid all around.
When Pool Infrastructure Solo Mining Makes Sense
Let’s talk strategy. Using HeroMiners for solo mining makes sense in specific situations:
You want to try multiple coins. Setting up your own nodes for Kaspa, Ravencoin, Ergo, and Alephium would take days and cost way more than the 1.5% fee. With HeroMiners, you can switch between them in 30 seconds.
You have medium-sized hashrate. If you’re running 6-12 GPUs, you have enough hashrate that finding blocks is possible, but not so much that running dedicated infrastructure is justified. This is the perfect use case.
You value uptime. HeroMiners runs enterprise-grade infrastructure. Your own node on a home internet connection? Not so much. I tried running a Ravencoin node on my PC and it crashed twice in one week because Windows updates.
You’re testing solo mining. Maybe you’re not sure if you like solo mining yet. Using HeroMiners lets you test for a month or two without major technical commitment. If you hate it, just switch back to regular pool mining.
When You Should Run Your Own Node Instead
Pool infrastructure isn’t always the answer. You should consider running your own solo mining node if:
- You’re mining only one coin long-term
- You have massive hashrate (think 50+ GPUs) and fees add up
- You want maximum control and transparency
- You’re mining a coin not supported by any pool infrastructure
For Bitcoin specifically, I recommend using your own node or Solo.CKPool.org over HeroMiners. Bitcoin node setup is well-documented, the blockchain sync takes time but isn’t terrible, and the mining software (cgminer, bfgminer) works great with local nodes.
Check our Bitcoin Core solo mining configuration guide if you want to go that route.
Hardware Recommendations for HeroMiners Solo Mining
Your choice of hardware matters more in solo mining than in pool mining. In a pool, 5% lower efficiency just means 5% less daily payout. In solo mining, lower hashrate means worse odds of ever finding a block.
For KawPoW coins (Ravencoin, Neoxa, Clore.ai):
Around 30 MH/s on KawPoW at 130W. Best efficiency in the 3000 series for this algorithm, and still available used. Solid choice for budget solo miners.
Delivers about 27 MH/s on KawPoW with lower power draw than NVIDIA equivalents. Great if you’re already Team AMD or want slightly lower electricity costs.
For Autolykos (Ergo):
Solid 165 MH/s on Ergo at around 120W. Memory-intensive algorithm that benefits from GDDR6 speed, making the 3070 a strong performer.
For kHeavyHash (Kaspa):
Pushes close to 1 TH/s on Kaspa with excellent efficiency. More expensive upfront, but the hashrate advantage is substantial for a solo miner chasing blocks.
Here’s my honest take: If you’re just starting solo mining, don’t buy the newest, most expensive GPUs. Grab something from the RTX 3000 or RX 6000 series used. You’ll get 70% of the performance at 50% of the cost, and if solo mining doesn’t work out for you, you haven’t dropped two grand on hardware.
I started with two used RTX 3060 Ti cards that cost me about $450 total. They’re not the fastest, but they’re efficient and have been running solid for ten months now. No blocks yet, but I’m having fun trying.
Real Solo Mining Success Stories Using Pool Infrastructure
Solo mining sounds theoretical until you hear about people actually finding blocks. And yeah, it happens more than you’d think.
Some guy on Reddit posted about finding a Ravencoin block with 400 MH/s after just 11 days of mining on HeroMiners. That’s way below the expected time — pure luck. He got 2,500 RVN (worth about $90 at the time), which isn’t life-changing but definitely paid his electricity for a few months.
Another miner found three Kaspa blocks in one week with 1.2 TH/s. Statistically, he should’ve found around two blocks that week, so he got slightly lucky. But the point is: it’s possible with reasonable hashrate.
I haven’t found a block yet, but I’ve been following altcoin solo mining success stories on our site and others. It motivates me to keep going.
The biggest thing I learned from these stories: Almost nobody who finds blocks is running huge operations. It’s mostly people with 3-10 GPUs who just got lucky at the right time. That could be you. That could be me.
Common Problems and Solutions for HeroMiners Solo Mining
Problem: Hashrate shows as zero on dashboard
Solution: Check your wallet address spelling. One wrong character means the pool doesn’t know where to credit your work. Also make sure you’re connecting to the correct port for your coin.
Problem: Miner connects but immediately disconnects
Solution: Usually a firewall issue or wrong stratum protocol. Try switching between SSL and non-SSL ports. If using lolMiner, add --apiport 0 to disable the API port which sometimes conflicts.
Problem: “Low difficulty shares rejected”
Solution: This is normal for solo mining. You’re submitting way fewer shares than in pool mining because you’re only looking for block-solving shares. As long as your miner doesn’t show ERROR messages, you’re fine.
Problem: Shares accepted but blocks found shows zero
Solution: Welcome to solo mining! You can submit millions of shares without finding a block. That’s literally how it works. Your shares are being accepted, but they’re not the winning lottery ticket yet.
Don’t make my mistake: I thought something was broken after three days of mining with “0 blocks found.” Then I realized the expected time to find a block with my hashrate was 52 days. Patience is part of the game.
Cost Analysis: Is HeroMiners Solo Mining Worth It?
Let’s do the honest math because I’m not here to sell you hopium.
My setup: Two RTX 3060 Ti cards, 280W total power draw (both cards plus system), mining Ravencoin 24/7.
Electricity cost: $0.12/kWh (US average)
Daily electricity: 280W × 24h = 6.72 kWh = $0.81/day
Monthly electricity: $24.30
Expected time to find a Ravencoin block: ~52 days
Block reward after HeroMiners fee: 2,462.5 RVN
Current RVN price: $0.005647
Expected value per block: Roughly $70-90 depending on RVN price
So over 52 days, I spend $41.76 on electricity and expect to find one block worth $70-90. That’s theoretically profitable… barely.
But here’s the reality: Variance means I might find a block in 10 days (awesome!) or 120 days (I’m losing money). That’s the gamble. If electricity costs more than $0.15/kWh in your area, solo mining smaller coins probably doesn’t make economic sense unless you’re doing it for fun.
Better Strategies for Positive Expected Value
Mine during off-peak electricity hours if your utility offers time-of-use rates. My parents’ power company charges $0.07/kWh from 9 PM to 7 AM. That cuts costs by 40%.
Target coins with favorable block rewards relative to difficulty. Kaspa has fast blocks and decent rewards. Alephium has merged mining capability that slightly improves economics.
Overclock your GPUs properly. Adding 5% hashrate for 2% more power consumption improves your odds without killing profitability. See our guide on overclocking and undervolting for solo mining.
Consider solo mining as part of a hedge strategy rather than primary income. Maybe 80% of your hashrate goes to normal pool mining for steady income, 20% goes to solo lottery tickets on HeroMiners.
Should You Use HeroMiners for Solo Mining?
After ten months of using various solo mining services, I think HeroMiners is one of the better options for GPU altcoin solo mining. Not perfect, but pretty solid.
What they do well:
- Reliable infrastructure that rarely goes down
- Good coin variety for GPU miners
- Simple setup with no account required
- Transparent stats and monitoring
- Automatic payouts directly to your wallet
What could be better:
- 1.5% fee is higher than some alternatives
- No built-in monitoring alerts or notifications
- Documentation is basic, assumes you know mining already
- Some smaller coins have stability issues occasionally
For someone just getting into solo mining who doesn’t want to mess with node setup, HeroMiners is honestly a solid choice. The 1.5% fee is worth paying to avoid the headache of syncing five different blockchains.
For experienced miners with serious hashrate, you might want to compare costs. If you’re running 20+ GPUs and mining one coin consistently, setting up your own infrastructure probably makes financial sense.
My personal plan: Keep using HeroMiners for coin-hopping solo mining (trying Kaspa this month, maybe Ravencoin next month), and run my own Bitcoin node for BTC solo mining with my Bitaxe. Best of both worlds.
Frequently Asked Questions
What’s the minimum hashrate needed to solo mine on HeroMiners?
There’s no technical minimum — you can solo mine with a single GPU if you want. But practically? I’d say at least 100 MH/s for KawPoW coins, 500 GH/s for Kaspa, or 3 GH/s for Ergo. Anything less and you’re looking at multiple months between blocks, which tests your patience more than your hardware.
Can I solo mine multiple coins simultaneously on HeroMiners?
Absolutely. You can point different GPUs or mining rigs to different coins. Like half your GPUs mine Ravencoin solo while the other half mine Kaspa solo. Just configure each miner with the appropriate server address and port. Your odds for each coin are independent.
Does HeroMiners support merged mining for solo miners?
Not really. Merged mining (like mining Litecoin and Dogecoin simultaneously) works on their regular pools, but their solo infrastructure doesn’t support it. If you want merged mining advantages in solo mode, you’ll need to run your own node setup. Check our merged mining economics guide for details.
What happens if HeroMiners goes offline while I’m mining?
Your miner loses connection and stops submitting work. You don’t lose any previous shares (they’re irrelevant in solo mining anyway), but you stop hunting for blocks until the pool comes back online. In my ten months using them, I’ve seen maybe three outages, each lasting under an hour. Pretty reliable compared to some smaller pools.
How do taxes work for blocks found through HeroMiners solo mining?
You owe income tax on the fair market value of the coins at the time you receive them (when you find the block). Then if you sell them later for more, you owe capital gains tax on the difference. Keep records of every block you find, the date, and the USD value that day. Our solo mining tax implications guide covers this in more detail.