Solo mining is the same everywhere — the math doesn't care which country your plug is in. So this page isn't about a magic Thai advantage. It's about the two things that do change for a miner in Bangkok, Chiang Mai or Phuket: how close the pool's server is and how you turn a found block into baht. Everything else — the odds, the rules, the lottery — is identical to every other honest solo pool.
SoloLuck runs ckpool in true per-miner solo mode (-B) from a node in Jakarta. For a miner in Thailand that's a short regional hop instead of a trip across the Pacific. The site also ships in Thai — read it at sololuck.io/th — and the community lives on Telegram at @SoloLuckPool.
SoloLuck never holds your coins. Your Bitcoin address is your username. When you connect a miner, you log in as your own bc1... address and the password can be literally anything. If your hardware solves a block, the network pays the reward straight to that address on-chain — it never passes through us.
That matters in Thailand because the cash-out step is entirely your own. A block reward lands in the wallet you control; from there you'd move the BTC to whichever Thai exchange you already use for THB withdrawals to your bank and sell on your own terms. We're not a counterparty and there's nothing to withdraw from us — we don't endorse any particular exchange. Use a wallet whose keys you hold (a Ledger, or a self-custody mobile wallet), not an address that belongs to an exchange deposit page.
Our only fee is 2%, taken as a single coinbase output on a block you actually solve. Find nothing — like almost everyone, almost always — and you pay nothing, ever.
Solo mining is a race to submit a winning share before the rest of the planet. The further your shares travel, the more arrive stale — submitted a beat too late to count. Distance is the one lever a pool genuinely controls.
The Jakarta node sits about 6 ms from much of Indonesia and nearby SEA. From Thailand it's a short regional hop — further than from Java, but a different universe from the ~250 ms round-trip to a US pool. AtlasPool's Hong Kong anycast is further north from Bangkok; ckpool and public-pool live in the US/AU. For a Thai miner, Jakarta is simply the nearest honest solo host.
Be clear-eyed about what this buys you: fewer wasted shares, not better odds. Latency trims the edges; it does not change your chance of finding a block. If you want to see that chance for your own hashrate, run it through the odds calculator.
The thing that actually decides whether home solo mining makes sense in Thailand isn't the pool — it's your power bill and your room temperature. Thai residential electricity is billed on a progressive tariff (the more you draw, the higher the per-unit rate), so a miner running 24/7 can push your whole house into a pricier band. Check your latest MEA or PEA bill before you commit a big rig.
Heat is the second tax. Bangkok's climate means an always-on miner is fighting your air-conditioning, and the AC then costs extra power to undo the heat the miner just made. Small, low-watt devices (a Bitaxe or NerdMiner) sidestep most of this — they sip a few watts and double as a desk gadget. A loud S19 in a hot flat is a different commitment entirely.
Connect to stratum.sololuck.io (IP 148.230.98.87) and pick the port that matches your hardware. The tier only sets the starting share difficulty so your device reports cleanly — it has no effect on your odds.
| Port | Tier | For |
|---|---|---|
| 3335 | Nano (diff 1) | NerdMiner, tiny ESP32, sub-100 GH devices |
| 3333 | Lite | Bitaxe-class |
| 8081 | Standard | Mid-range / multiple boards |
| 4334 | Pro | S19 and other high-hashrate ASICs |
| 3334 | TLS | Any tier, encrypted connection |
Username = your bc1... address (add .worker to name a rig), password = anything. Full walkthrough on the setup page, and a pool-by-pool breakdown on compare.
Solo mining is a lottery, and the jackpot is roughly one block in the entire global field every ten minutes. A small home miner may statistically expect to wait thousands of years for a single block. Those odds are identical on every solo pool on Earth — SoloLuck, public-pool, ckpool, AtlasPool, all of them. A pool can only change three things: its fee, how it pays you, and its latency. We compete on those and nothing else.
For the record: no block has been solved on SoloLuck yet, and most of the hashrate you'll see on the pool right now is the operator's own test rigs. We'd rather tell you that than dress up a number. If you want the full lottery-vs-steady-income framing before you point a miner here, read solo vs pooled mining. Mine because you find it fun and you understand the gamble — not because anyone promised you riches.
Paste your address and copy the config from /setup, watch the pool on /status, and check every claim on /verify. Mine to your own address — that is what makes it truly solo.
Not ready to point a miner yet? Run your gear through the odds calculator, or join Telegram for block & record alerts — no rig required.
Join the SoloLuck community
Mine true-solo with other miners on Telegram — setup help, block alerts, and real people.
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