- Why Hosting Due Diligence Is Different
- Category 1: Infrastructure & Power (10 Questions)
- Category 2: Security & Custody (8 Questions)
- Category 3: Operations & Track Record (6 Questions)
- Category 4: Financial & Contract Terms (6 Questions)
- Category 5: Regulatory & Compliance (4 Questions)
- Category 6: Bitcoin Alignment (2 Questions)
- Red Flags That Disqualify a Host
- Green Flags of a Credible Host
- Evaluating Host Geography: The Oregon Advantage
- Estate Planning Intersection
- Frequently Asked Questions
Why Hosting Due Diligence Is Different
Hosted Bitcoin mining is not a vendor relationship. It is a multi-year counterparty exposure in which you are trusting a third party with a substantial concentration of physical capital — ASIC machines that may represent anywhere from $50,000 to $5 million or more in hardware — in a facility you don't control, in a jurisdiction that may be far from your legal counsel, with an operator whose financial health, operational competence, and contractual integrity you cannot monitor in real time.
Most investors who evaluate hosting relationships apply a fraction of the diligence they would to any comparable business relationship. They visit a website, receive a rate quote, review a one-page contract summary, and sign. The asymmetry between the capital at risk and the diligence applied has produced a pattern of losses across the industry: facility closures, equipment disputes, insurance gaps, custody ambiguities, and exit terms that surprised clients who hadn't read carefully enough.
The failures are not rare or theoretical. Hosting facilities have closed abruptly when power economics deteriorated. ASIC machines have been stranded in facilities undergoing bankruptcy proceedings, caught in creditor disputes that were not anticipated by clients who didn't know to ask about bailment provisions. Mined Bitcoin has been frozen inside facility payout queues during disputes. Uptime guarantees written in one part of the contract have been quietly negated by curtailment provisions buried in another. These are the real failure modes.
The purpose of this framework is not to be exhaustive for its own sake. It is to give you a structured approach to the diligence process, organized into six categories that cover the material risks in every hosting relationship. Work through all 36 questions. Document the answers. Use discrepancies, evasions, and refusals to answer as data points — they tell you as much as the affirmative answers do.
Before committing capital, download the Abundant Mines 36-Question Due Diligence Checklist — a free, printable framework you can use to score every prospective host against the same criteria. This guide provides the context and reasoning behind each category; the checklist gives you the working document to use in actual evaluations.
Category 1: Infrastructure & Power
10 Questions That Determine Your Economics
Power is the single most important operating variable in Bitcoin mining. It determines your cost structure, your break-even price, and your long-term viability. It is also the primary vector through which hosting relationships fail: facilities that can't manage their power cost or contract are facilities that close. Every question in this category deserves a specific, documented answer — not a verbal assurance.
Category 2: Security & Custody
8 Questions Protecting Your Hardware and Your Bitcoin
Your ASIC miners are valuable physical assets inside a building you don't control. Beyond the hardware itself, your mined Bitcoin — if held in the facility's custody between payouts — represents additional counterparty exposure. Physical security and insurance coverage are not marketing details; they are the protection layer between your capital and a range of loss scenarios that have actually occurred in this industry.
Download the 36-Question Bitcoin Mining Host Due Diligence Checklist (Free)
Get the complete printable checklist covering all 36 questions across all 6 categories. Use it to score every prospective host and turn a qualitative evaluation into a structured, comparable assessment.
Download Free Checklist →Category 3: Operations & Track Record
6 Questions Verifying the Operator's Competence and History
The hosting industry includes operators who have been running facilities for a decade and operators who launched last year. Both may present identical marketing materials. Track record questions force the conversation into verifiable territory — away from claims about capability and toward documented evidence of performance.
Category 4: Financial & Contract Terms
6 Questions That Govern Every Scenario
The hosting agreement governs your rights in normal operations, in disputes, and in facility failure. These terms deserve the same careful review as any significant commercial contract. If you are committing more than $250,000 in hardware, qualified legal counsel with mining hosting experience should review the agreement before you sign — not after.
Category 5: Regulatory & Compliance
4 Questions Assessing Jurisdictional Risk
The regulatory environment governing Bitcoin mining varies significantly by jurisdiction — at the state, local, and utility-district level. Jurisdictional risk is not theoretical: mining operations have been shut down or heavily curtailed in multiple U.S. states and internationally due to regulatory, political, or utility-driven actions. Understanding where your machines are located and the regulatory posture of that jurisdiction is a material due diligence dimension.
Category 6: Bitcoin Alignment
2 Questions That Separate Hosts from Bitcoin-Native Operators
Bitcoin mining is not merely a data center business. It is the backbone of the most important monetary network in the world. The operators who understand this — who run full nodes, who take principled positions on network governance, who see their facilities as infrastructure for sound money rather than as generic computing capacity — are the operators most likely to behave correctly when conflicts arise between operational convenience and network integrity.
Red Flags That Disqualify a Host
Some patterns in hosting relationships are sufficiently correlated with poor outcomes that they warrant walking away, regardless of how compelling the other terms appear. These are not yellow flags requiring more information — they are disqualifying signals.
No verifiable physical address. A hosting provider that cannot or will not provide a specific, verifiable facility address — one you can look up, visit, and confirm with satellite imagery — has no legitimate reason for the opacity. The physical location of your machines is a fundamental fact of the relationship. An operator who obscures it is hiding something material.
No reference clients willing to speak with you. Direct client references are the gold standard of operational verification. A host that has been operating for more than 12 months and cannot produce a single client willing to take a phone call has either a very short client list (suggesting operational immaturity) or clients who would not speak positively (suggesting operational problems). Neither is acceptable for a multi-year capital commitment.
No insurance coverage for client equipment. An uninsured hosting relationship means your hardware has no protection against fire, theft, or catastrophic events beyond whatever legal claim you might be able to assert against an operator who may have no assets to collect against. This is not a coverage gap to negotiate around — it is a disqualifier. Facility insurance covering client equipment under CCC policies is a baseline, not a premium feature.
Pooled power contracts where your bill disappears into the host's aggregate account. In a pooled power structure, the host aggregates all client power consumption into their own account with the utility. You have no independent relationship with the power provider, no visibility into actual power costs, and no recourse if the host's aggregate account is in dispute. Your power bill is a component of a number you cannot audit. This is distinct from a direct metering structure where your machines have dedicated circuit monitoring.
Hash rate guarantees that seem too good. Legitimate hosting operators guarantee uptime and power availability — they do not guarantee specific hash rates. Hash rate is a function of your specific machines, their firmware, their operating temperature, and network difficulty. An operator who guarantees a specific hash rate either doesn't understand the business or is marketing around a claim they can't deliver. Either way, the discrepancy between guaranteed and actual hash rate is the mechanism through which you lose money in the relationship.
Refusal to allow site visits. A legitimate facility has nothing to hide. Any hosting operator that declines site visits from prospective or current clients — even with reasonable scheduling and security protocols — is either hiding the facility's actual condition, hiding whether your machines are actually present, or hiding operational practices they know wouldn't withstand scrutiny. You have no other way to verify that your machines exist and are operational.
Artificial urgency or pressure to commit quickly. "This rate is only available for 48 hours" is a pressure tactic, not a legitimate constraint. Hosting relationships are long-term capital commitments that benefit both parties — no credible operator needs to rush you past adequate due diligence. An operator creating artificial urgency is either poorly run or deliberately preventing you from completing the evaluation process that would reveal problems.
Green Flags of a Credible Host
Conversely, certain characteristics are associated with hosting providers who are operationally serious, financially stable, and genuinely aligned with client interests. These green flags don't guarantee a successful relationship, but their presence substantially increases the probability of one.
Vertically integrated power. A host that owns or has a direct long-term agreement with its power source — whether a hydroelectric PPA, a dedicated utility substation, or a behind-the-meter generation asset — has meaningfully more control over its cost structure and more stability in its operating economics than a host leasing capacity inside someone else's power footprint.
Long-term utility agreements with documented history. A hosting facility that has maintained its utility relationship through multiple Bitcoin market cycles — including periods when mining economics deteriorated sharply — has demonstrated that its underlying economics work even in adversity. Ask to see the term of the utility agreement and how long the relationship has been in place.
On-site staff 24/7. Round-the-clock staffing is the clearest indicator of operational seriousness. It means faster hardware failure response, immediate alarm handling, and continuous monitoring that no remote system can fully replicate. It is also expensive — hosts that maintain 24/7 staffing are demonstrating a cost commitment to operational quality.
Transparent SLAs with liquidated damages provisions. SLAs that include specific, pre-agreed financial penalties for breach — called liquidated damages — are the gold standard of hosting accountability. They eliminate the need for you to prove actual damages in a dispute and create real operational incentives for the host to maintain performance. A host that offers liquidated damages provisions is one that is confident in its ability to meet its commitments.
Proactive financial disclosure. A hosting operator who voluntarily offers audited financials, or who responds to financial disclosure requests with transparency rather than deflection, is demonstrating confidence in its financial health. Financial opacity, by contrast, is almost always a negative signal — credible operators have nothing to hide and understand why you're asking.
Automatic daily sweep to client-controlled custody addresses. The cleanest custody structure is one in which the hosting provider never holds your mined Bitcoin at all — it sweeps directly from the mining pool to a wallet address you control, daily. This eliminates the counterparty exposure for your accumulated production entirely. Hosts that offer and encourage this structure are aligned with client interests; hosts that resist it are not.
Evaluating Host Geography: The Oregon Advantage
Where a hosting facility is located matters enormously — not just for legal jurisdiction, but for the fundamental economics of the operation. Power cost, climate, and regulatory environment are all functions of geography. When evaluating any prospective host, benchmark their location against the characteristics that define the most favorable hosting environments.
Power cost. The Pacific Northwest — particularly Oregon and Washington — benefits from among the cheapest industrial power in the continental United States, generated by Columbia River hydroelectric infrastructure that has been producing power since the mid-twentieth century. Rates in the range of $0.03–$0.05/kWh are achievable through direct utility relationships in these markets, compared to $0.07–$0.12/kWh for comparable industrial loads in other regions. The difference compounds over a multi-year hosting relationship into a significant economic advantage.
Climate and cooling efficiency. Oregon's mild, temperate climate — particularly in the Columbia River Gorge corridor — enables free air cooling for the majority of the year. An ASIC miner generates significant heat; removing that heat is an energy cost. In a climate where ambient temperatures allow direct air-side economization without mechanical refrigeration, Power Usage Effectiveness ratios approach 1.05 — meaning nearly all consumed power goes to hashing, not cooling. Compare this to facilities in hot climates that may spend 20–40 cents of every power dollar on cooling before a single hash is computed.
Regulatory stability. Oregon has maintained a consistently stable regulatory posture toward industrial power users, including mining operations. The state has no targeted mining regulations or moratoriums, a well-established utility regulatory framework, and a history of accommodation for large industrial power customers. This stands in contrast to jurisdictions that have imposed sudden moratoriums, special mining utility rates, or local ordinances targeting ASIC noise — changes that can materially alter a hosting relationship without warning.
What this means for your evaluation. When a prospective host describes their location in general terms — "Pacific Northwest," "rural Oregon," "Columbia River corridor" — ask for specificity: the precise municipality, the utility service territory, and the specific power contract. Not all Oregon locations are equal; a facility in a favorable BPA service territory with a long-term industrial rate agreement has meaningfully different characteristics than one in a higher-rate investor-owned utility service area.
When evaluating a host's geographic claim, verify: (1) Specific municipality and utility service territory; (2) Utility rate class and current effective rate per kWh; (3) Average ambient temperature range — affects cooling overhead; (4) History of grid reliability in the service area; (5) Local regulatory history — any zoning challenges, noise ordinances, or mining-specific regulations; (6) Proximity to nearest equipment service center for ASIC repairs.
The Estate Planning Intersection
Bitcoin mining operations — particularly hosted mining — create estate planning considerations that most attorneys don't encounter in standard practice. The hosting contract itself is an asset with legal characteristics that need to be addressed in your estate plan, not just operationally managed as a business contract.
A hosting agreement for $1M in mining hardware is a multi-year contractual commitment with a counterparty, payment obligations, equipment retrieval provisions, and mined Bitcoin production flowing to a custody address. If the account holder dies or becomes incapacitated, questions that have nothing to do with legal title to the Bitcoin or the machines immediately become pressing: Who has the authority to log into the monitoring dashboard? Who can communicate with the hosting provider? Who can authorize maintenance on the machines? Who can pull the machines if the relationship needs to be terminated?
Assignment provisions. The hosting agreement should include an assignment clause allowing the agreement to be transferred — to a trust, to an LLC, to a successor entity, or to a beneficiary — without triggering a default or requiring the host's consent. Many standard hosting agreements prohibit assignment without the host's approval, which creates a real problem if the agreement needs to be transferred as part of estate administration. Negotiate this provision before signing, not after a death event makes negotiation impractical.
Successor rights and operational continuity. If you are incapacitated, your trustee or attorney-in-fact needs to be able to operate the mining relationship — paying invoices, making hardware decisions, accessing monitoring data, and directing the disposition of mined Bitcoin. The hosting agreement should contemplate this scenario and specify the documentation the host requires to recognize a successor or authorized representative. A host that requires original signatures for every operational decision is a host that will create problems during incapacity.
Buy-sell provisions for jointly owned operations. If the mining operation is owned by multiple parties — family members, business partners, co-investors — the hosting agreement needs to coordinate with a buy-sell agreement governing what happens if one owner dies, becomes incapacitated, or wants to exit the relationship. The hosting agreement may need to be amended to recognize multiple authorized parties and specify the decision-making authority each holds.
Trust ownership of the hosting agreement. The cleanest estate planning structure for a significant mining operation places the hosting agreement inside an entity — typically a revocable trust that becomes irrevocable at death, or a properly structured LLC — that provides continuity of operation regardless of changes in individual ownership. The trustee or manager of the entity can operate the mining relationship without the interruptions and uncertainties associated with personal agreements that don't automatically transfer.
For deeper context on how Bitcoin mining assets interact with estate tax planning, including the powerful deferral strategies available under Section 6166, see our detailed analysis of Bitcoin mining and estate tax deferral under Section 6166. For the broader framework of how a Bitcoin mining operation integrates with a family office structure, see our guide to Bitcoin mining for the family office. And for the foundational estate planning considerations that apply to all Bitcoin holdings, see our Bitcoin estate planning guide.
Bitcoin Mining: The Most Powerful Tax Strategy Available
For high-net-worth Bitcoin holders, mining is the only strategy that simultaneously generates yield, accumulates BTC, and creates significant tax offsets — through equipment depreciation, operating expense deductions, and bonus depreciation on capital investments. Most family offices overlook mining entirely. Abundant Mines has compiled every major Bitcoin mining tax strategy in one place.
Explore Bitcoin Mining Tax Strategies →Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most important due diligence question to ask a Bitcoin mining host?
"Who owns the power contract, and what happens to my machines if you default on it?" Power is the host's primary cost and primary default risk. A host that doesn't own its power infrastructure is dependent on a landlord who has no relationship with you. If the host defaults, your machines may lose power immediately — with no legal claim against the underlying power provider. Ask for the power contract structure, the counterparty, the term, and what happens to client equipment in any default scenario.
What are the biggest red flags in a Bitcoin mining hosting contract?
No physical address; no reference clients; no insurance for client equipment; pooled power contracts where your bill disappears into the host's aggregate; hash rate guarantees (legitimate hosts guarantee uptime, not hash rate); refusal to allow site visits; no bailment provision establishing your machines as your property. Any one of these warrants serious scrutiny. More than two should end the conversation.
What insurance should a Bitcoin mining host carry?
At minimum: property insurance covering client equipment under care, custody, and control (CCC) — with you named as additional insured; general liability; cyber liability; and ideally business interruption coverage. Ask for insurance certificates. A host without CCC property insurance exposes you to full equipment loss in a fire, flood, or theft — with no coverage to fall back on.
How do I verify a Bitcoin mining host's claimed uptime?
Four methods: (1) Reference clients — get direct contacts you can call independently, not website testimonials; (2) Pool data — if the host will tell you their mining pool, you can often verify approximate aggregate hashrate from pool statistics; (3) Direct monitoring access — ASICs report to management dashboards; ask for access to yours; (4) Site visit — nothing replaces seeing the facility in operation. A host that refuses a site visit is disqualifying.
What is a fair hosting contract term?
12–24 months with renewal options is standard. Avoid longer commitments without clear exit provisions — mining economics change rapidly with difficulty and BTC price. Look for: termination for convenience with 30–60 day notice and equipment removal rights; force majeure exit if power costs spike materially; price escalation caps limiting hosting fee increases at renewal. The exit terms are as important as the entry terms.
Why does geography matter in Bitcoin mining hosting due diligence?
Geography determines power cost, climate (cooling efficiency), regulatory environment, and retrieval logistics. The Pacific Northwest — particularly Oregon — offers some of the most favorable conditions: cheap hydropower, mild year-round temperatures enabling free air cooling, stable regulatory environment, and no state income tax. When evaluating any host's geographic claim, verify the specific utility service territory and rate class, not just the region — not all Oregon locations have equivalent economics.
How should a hosting agreement be structured for estate planning purposes?
Hosting agreements need: (1) An assignment clause allowing transfer to a trust, LLC, or successor without triggering default; (2) Successor rights provisions defining who can operate the agreement after death or incapacity; (3) Buy-sell provisions if jointly owned; (4) Equipment retrieval rights exercisable by a trustee or executor. Ideally, hold the hosting agreement inside a trust or LLC from the start — this provides continuity of operation without requiring mid-contract renegotiation during a high-stress period.
What is the difference between a $/kWh hosting structure and a percentage-of-hash structure?
In a $/kWh structure, you pay a rate per unit of power your machines consume — directly tied to actual consumption and independently auditable via your machines' power draw. In a percentage-of-hash structure, the host takes a cut of your mining revenue. The $/kWh model is generally preferred by institutional miners because it's transparent and auditable. Percentage-of-hash structures create alignment concerns: the host benefits from underreporting your gross production, and you cannot independently verify the base on which the percentage is calculated.
Download the 36-Question Bitcoin Mining Host Due Diligence Checklist (Free)
Abundant Mines has distilled this framework into a printable, fillable checklist you can use in actual hosting evaluations. Score every prospective host against the same 36 questions across all 6 categories. Free download — no commitment required.
Download the Free 36-Question Checklist →