Bitcoin mining operations in the US are absorbing a 47 percent increase in deployment costs after Section 232 tariffs on steel, aluminum, and copper stacked onBitcoin mining operations in the US are absorbing a 47 percent increase in deployment costs after Section 232 tariffs on steel, aluminum, and copper stacked on

Bitcoin Mining Costs Are Up 47% and the Hash Rate May Follow

2026/04/15 02:05
3 min read
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Bitcoin mining operations in the US are absorbing a 47 percent increase in deployment costs after Section 232 tariffs on steel, aluminum, and copper stacked on top of an existing 21.6 percent duty on ASIC miners from Southeast Asia, pushing competitive advantage toward mining operations in Kazakhstan, Russia, and other tariff-exempt jurisdictions.

Summary
  • A flagship Antminer S21 XP now carries roughly $1,600 in Section 232 metals duties on top of the existing 21.6 percent ASIC reciprocal tariff, bringing the combined tariff burden to approximately 47 percent before any other import fees apply.
  • Mining containers, the steel structures with copper wiring and aluminum ventilation that house industrial deployments, have jumped $10,000 to $25,000 in cost per unit, compounding the hardware tariff impact for any operation scaling new capacity.
  • All-in production costs for publicly listed US miners already averaged approximately $74,600 per bitcoin in late March before the Section 232 tariffs took effect on April 6, meaning the tariff-driven increase could push breakeven costs closer to $82,000 to $85,000.

The Section 232 proclamation signed April 2 raised tariffs to 50 percent on products made entirely from steel, aluminum, and copper, and 25 percent on derivative products containing substantial metal content. Mining rigs qualify as derivative products, adding 25 percent to the full customs value of each unit on top of the pre-existing 21.6 percent Southeast Asia ASIC tariff. The tariffs took effect April 6, meaning every hardware order placed after that date is subject to the combined burden. Large miners who stocked inventory ahead of the tariffs, including Marathon Digital, Riot Platforms, and CleanSpark, are partially insulated for now, but each future hardware upgrade cycle becomes relatively more expensive compared to offshore competitors.

Bitcoin Mining: Why This Is Reshaping Where Hash Rate Goes

The United States controls roughly 38 percent of global bitcoin hash rate. That position was built over four years after China banned mining in 2021, and it may now begin eroding under tariff pressure rather than a direct ban. A US miner replacing hardware with S21 XPs pays approximately 47 percent more than a competitor in Kazakhstan or Russia buying the same machines with zero tariff exposure. Hashprice, the daily revenue per terahash, is already near historical lows. Miners cannot absorb a 47 percent hardware cost increase without either raising capital, cutting expansion, or waiting for bitcoin to move higher.

What Miners Are Doing in Response

Large publicly listed miners with pre-tariff inventory are continuing operations without immediate impact. Bitmain opened its first US assembly line in January 2026 and MicroBT operates a plant since 2023, but these represent a fraction of total production. US-assembled rigs still carry tariffs on aluminum and copper components. Senators Cassidy and Lummis introduced the Mined in America Act in late March, which would create federal subsidies and tax incentives for domestic miners, but no vote date has been set.

What the Tariff Impact Means for Network Security

If hardware cost differentials persist across two to three upgrade cycles, meaningful hash rate could shift away from the US toward tariff-free jurisdictions. That would reduce the US share of bitcoin’s security model and concentrate hash rate in countries with weaker property rights and less regulatory transparency. The network crossed 1,000 exahashes per second in early 2026 with the US as the anchor, and sustaining that anchor becomes harder with each tariff cycle that makes domestic expansion more expensive than offshore alternatives.

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