Point your mining hardware at pool.sweethash.io using your Bitcoin payout address. If your hardware solves a block, the full reward — 3.125 BTC plus transaction fees — lands directly at your address.
Private node · No KYC · No telemetry phone-home
Streaming directly from our Bitcoin node and stratum stack. No CDN delay, no caching — what you see is the current state of the pool.
Three steps. No registration, no account creation. Your Bitcoin address is your identity.
Point your miner at the SweetHash stratum endpoint below. Works with any ASIC or compatible mining firmware.
Use your Bitcoin payout address as the worker username. Example: bc1q…wallet.workerName
Within a minute your worker appears on the public dashboard. Search your address to see hashrate, shares, and odds.
A pool designed around the principle that block rewards belong to the lucky finder — not the operator.
The pool keeps nothing. If you find a block, every satoshi of the reward goes to your address — including transaction fees.
No proportional shares. No PPLNS. The miner who finds the block keeps it. The lottery — pure and on-chain.
Public dashboard with multi-window hashrate, best-share proximity, odds of finding a block, and a per-address leaderboard.
Pool runs against a private, fully-validating Bitcoin Core node — not a 3rd-party RPC. Lower latency, no censorship surface.
Everything you need to mine, monitor, and verify — all open and public.
Live pool hashrate, top miners, block chances, historical chart, search by BTC address.
Direct entry point. Used by miners after the first-boot configuration is done.
Given your hashrate and the current network difficulty, your odds over 1h / 1d / 1w / 1m / 1y.
Our own mempool.space mirror — verify transactions, fees, and block templates against our node.
SweetHash is a solo Bitcoin mining pool operated as public infrastructure. We run a private Bitcoin Core node, a hardened stratum stack, and a public dashboard that exposes everything we see — pool hashrate, worker fleet, share statistics, and odds of finding a block per address.
Mining is anonymous at the protocol level: the only identifier we record is the Bitcoin address you submit shares with. We don't run analytics, we don't aggregate IPs, and we don't sell or share telemetry with third parties.