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Bitcoin Mining Insurance: What's Covered and What's Not

Bitcoin mining insurance in 2026: what's covered, what's excluded, cost benchmarks, coverage options, and the risk management framework that protects your hardware investment.

JH
Jacob H.
Founder, LMC Mining Intelligence · 8 years in Bitcoin mining
·15 min read·Updated 2026About the author →
insurancerisk managementhardware protection
Key Takeaways
  • Bitcoin mining hardware is a significant physical asset — 10 S21 Pros = $38,000; 100 units = $380,000 — sitting in a facility you don't directly control
  • Insurable risks: theft, fire, flood, electrical surge, business interruption. Non-insurable risks: BTC price decline, difficulty growth, hosting insolvency
  • Abundant Miners includes equipment insurance in the $225/month flat fee — the simplest path for small operators and a key provider differentiator
  • For operators with their own policies: commercial inland marine insurance is the cleanest product for equipment at third-party locations
  • Operating reserve (3 months net profit) and facility diversification (for 20+ machines) are the risk management tools for the risks insurance doesn't cover

An Antminer S21 Pro costs approximately $3,800. Ten of them represents $38,000 in physical hardware. A 50-machine operation is $190,000 in assets. These assets sit in a third-party facility you don't control — exposed to fire, flood, electrical failure, theft, and operational disruptions. For a business generating $22,500/month in net profit, the risk of losing the hardware without insurance protection is material.

This guide covers what is and isn't insurable in Bitcoin mining, the specific coverage types and products available, cost benchmarks, and the broader risk management framework that addresses the risks insurance can't cover.

What Is and Isn't Insurable in Bitcoin Mining

One of the most common confusions in mining insurance is the boundary between insurable and non-insurable risks. Getting this wrong leads to either overspending on insurance for risks that can't be covered, or under-protecting against risks that can be.

Insurable Risks

These are physical and operational risks that standard insurance products can cover:

  • Physical theft of hardware: If ASIC miners are stolen from the hosting facility, equipment insurance pays the replacement value. Most policies cover theft at named third-party locations — verify your hosting facility is a named location on the policy.
  • Fire damage: Fire at the hosting facility is typically covered under commercial property policies and inland marine policies. The key variable is whether your policy covers equipment at third-party locations (inland marine) vs only owned premises (standard commercial property).
  • Flood and water damage: Water damage from flooding, burst pipes, or facility failures is typically covered under inland marine or all-risk equipment policies. Exclusions: some policies exclude flood as a named peril — check this specifically.
  • Electrical surge and lightning damage: Power surges, lightning strikes, and electrical failures that damage ASIC hardware are typically covered under electrical damage riders or all-risk policies. Standard policies may exclude "mechanical breakdown" vs sudden electrical damage — read the exclusion language carefully.
  • Business interruption: Lost revenue during the period your operation is halted by a covered event. Available as a rider on equipment policies. Typically pays lost net revenue (not gross) for the period from damage to replacement/restart, up to a specified maximum period (often 90-180 days).

Non-Insurable Risks

These risks cannot be transferred to an insurance policy — they must be managed through operational and financial planning:

  • Bitcoin price decline: Not insurable. BTC price drops are market risk, not insurable events. Manage through hardware efficiency (which lowers your BTC breakeven price) and operating reserves.
  • Network difficulty increases: Not insurable. Difficulty growth is a feature of the Bitcoin protocol, not an insurable event. Manage through hardware quality and difficulty modeling before deployment.
  • Hosting provider insolvency: Generally not insurable through equipment coverage. Manage through contract vetting, counter-party due diligence, and facility diversification at scale.
  • Mining revenue loss from power outages (below BI threshold): Short outages (hours to days) are typically below business interruption claim thresholds. Manage through SLA negotiation with your hosting provider — seek 99%+ uptime SLAs with penalty clauses for extended outages.
  • Cryptocurrency wallet theft: Mining proceeds stolen from software or hardware wallets are generally not covered by equipment insurance. Manage through secure wallet practices (hardware wallets for large balances, multi-sig for institutional amounts).
  • Hardware obsolescence and depreciation: Not insurable. Hardware loses value as newer, more efficient ASICs are released. Manage through capital planning and depreciation modeling.

Coverage Options for Bitcoin Mining Hardware

There are four primary ways to get equipment insurance for Bitcoin mining hardware. The right choice depends on your scale, whether your hosting provider already includes coverage, and whether you operate as a business entity.

Option 1: Use a Hosting Provider That Includes Insurance

The simplest path: deploy hardware with a hosting provider that includes equipment insurance in the monthly fee. Abundant Miners includes equipment insurance in their $225/month flat-fee structure. This covers you from day one with no separate policy, no insurance paperwork, and no ongoing premium management.

What to verify with any hosting provider that claims insurance inclusion:

  • What events are covered (fire, theft, flood, surge — or just some of these)?
  • What is the per-unit coverage limit?
  • Who is the underwriter and is the policy current?
  • What is the claims process and estimated claim timeline?
  • Is business interruption included, or just equipment replacement?

Option 2: Commercial Inland Marine Insurance

Inland marine insurance is specifically designed for valuable equipment that moves between locations or operates at third-party facilities. For Bitcoin mining hardware, this is often the cleanest product available.

Key characteristics of commercial inland marine for mining:

  • Covers equipment at third-party locations (the hosting facility is a named location)
  • All-risk coverage available (covers everything not explicitly excluded, vs named-perils which only covers listed events)
  • Covers equipment in transit (during shipping to/from facility)
  • Policy premium: typically 1-2% of insured value annually
  • Can be obtained through commercial insurance brokers — not all standard insurers write mining hardware, so work with a broker who understands the asset class

Cost benchmark: $38,000 hardware fleet at 1.5% annual premium = $570/year. $190,000 fleet at 1.5% = $2,850/year.

Option 3: Schedule Mining Hardware on an Existing Business Policy

If you operate a registered business (LLC, S-Corp) with an existing commercial property policy, you may be able to schedule your mining hardware as a listed equipment item on the policy. This is often the lowest-cost option if you already pay for commercial property coverage.

Important caveats:

  • Standard commercial property policies cover equipment at the business premises — mining hardware at a third-party hosting facility may not be covered without a specific endorsement
  • Some policies exclude electronic equipment above a per-item or total threshold
  • Some insurers exclude cryptocurrency-specific equipment or operations entirely
  • Always get explicit written confirmation that the policy covers ASIC mining hardware at the specific third-party facility address

Option 4: Specialty Cryptocurrency/Digital Asset Insurance

A small but growing market of specialty insurers offers policies specifically designed for cryptocurrency operations. These typically cover a broader range of events (including some cybersecurity-related risks) but charge higher premiums (1.5-3% annually) and often require minimum fleet sizes (50+ machines).

For small operators (under 20 machines), inland marine or hosting-provider-included coverage is typically more accessible and cost-effective than specialty crypto policies.

What Insurance Costs at Different Scales

Fleet Size Hardware Value Inland Marine (1.5%/yr) w/ BI Rider (+30%) Annual Net Profit Insurance as % of Revenue
1 S21 Pro $3,800 $57/yr $74/yr ~$22,900 0.3%
10 S21 Pros $38,000 $570/yr $741/yr ~$228,000 0.3%
50 S21 Pros $190,000 $2,850/yr $3,705/yr ~$1,140,000 0.3%
100 S21 Pros $380,000 $5,700/yr $7,410/yr ~$1,825,000 0.4%

Insurance is inexpensive relative to mining revenue — approximately 0.3-0.4% of annual net profit at all scales. This is not a place to economize. The asymmetric risk (paying 0.3% annually to protect against a catastrophic loss of the full hardware asset) makes insurance straightforwardly worth it at any scale.

Risk Management Beyond Insurance

Insurance covers the hardware asset value — but several significant risks are outside its scope. A comprehensive risk management framework for Bitcoin mining addresses both insurable and non-insurable risks.

Operating Reserve

The most important non-insurance risk management tool. Maintain 3 months of net operating costs as cash reserve. For 10 S21 Pros generating $19,000/month net: keep $57,000 in liquid cash reserve. This covers:

  • Revenue gaps during insurance claim processing periods
  • Unexpected hosting cost increases before contract renewal
  • Hardware replacement costs for non-covered failures
  • Bridge period for BTC price corrections that compress margins

Hardware Documentation Before Deployment

Document every miner before it leaves your possession for the hosting facility:

  • Serial numbers (photograph the serial number label on each unit)
  • Purchase receipts with unit details
  • Photographs of hardware condition before shipping
  • Tracking information for shipment

This documentation is required for any insurance claim. Without it, claims can be disputed, reduced, or denied.

Hosting Contract Liability Review

Most hosting contracts include liability limitation language. Review carefully:

  • Does the provider accept liability for hardware damage at their facility?
  • Are there caps on liability per unit or total?
  • What is the notification requirement for loss/damage events?
  • What is the dispute resolution process for damage claims?

See our contract red flags guide for the full framework on evaluating hosting contract terms.

Facility Diversification (20+ Machines)

Once you reach 20+ machines, consider splitting the fleet across two facilities. Single-facility concentration means a fire, flood, or facility insolvency wipes out your entire operation simultaneously. A 70/30 or 60/40 split across two facilities significantly reduces this tail risk, even if per-unit hosting costs are slightly higher at smaller volume at each facility.

SLA Monitoring and Enforcement

Business interruption coverage pays for revenue loss from covered events — but most hosting SLAs define uptime thresholds below which you have contractual remedies. Negotiate SLAs with penalty clauses for extended outages (industry standard: 99%+ uptime; credits for downtime beyond threshold). This provides a contractual remedy for short outages that fall below insurance claim thresholds.

Wallet Security

Mined BTC should move off pool wallets regularly (weekly or biweekly) to a hardware wallet you control. Pool accounts are high-value targets; on-chain in a hardware wallet controlled by you is significantly more secure. For amounts above $50,000, consider multi-signature wallet arrangements. Mining hardware insurance does not cover wallet theft or loss — that risk is entirely under your own control.

Common Mistakes in Mining Insurance and Risk Management

  • Assuming hosting inclusion means comprehensive coverage without verifying the details. "Equipment insurance included" can mean anything from a complete all-risk policy from a reputable underwriter to a thin liability clause with narrow coverage. Always verify what specific events are covered, what the per-unit limit is, and who the underwriter is.
  • Using general commercial property insurance without verifying third-party location coverage. Standard commercial property covers equipment at your premises. Mining hardware at a hosting facility is at a third-party location. Without a specific endorsement or inland marine policy, your hardware may simply not be covered at the hosting facility — even if you think it is.
  • Not documenting hardware before deployment. The most common reason insurance claims are reduced or denied for mining hardware: no serial number records, no purchase documentation, no condition photos. Take 20 minutes to document every machine before shipping. Without it, proving what you lost — and what it was worth — becomes difficult.
  • Relying entirely on insurance to cover all risks. Insurance covers hardware value. It doesn't cover revenue volatility, difficulty growth, price risk, or hosting provider failure. Operators who have adequate insurance but no operating reserve are only half-protected. The complete framework is insurance + operating reserve + facility diversification + SLA enforcement.
  • Underinsuring to save on premiums. At 0.3% of annual net profit, insurance is the cheapest risk management tool in your toolkit. Cutting coverage to save $200-400/year on a $38,000 hardware fleet is a poor trade-off. Insure for full replacement value of all hardware.

Expert Tips for Mining Risk Management

  • Get your hosting provider's insurance details in writing before signing. "We insure your equipment" should be backed by: the insurer name, policy number, covered events, coverage limit per unit, and claims contact. Any provider reluctant to provide this in writing is a flag.
  • For 10+ machines, get an independent inland marine quote even if your hosting provider includes insurance. The quote takes 30-60 minutes and gives you a clear benchmark of what standalone coverage costs. If your hosting provider's inclusion is thin, you'll know exactly what it costs to supplement it.
  • Add business interruption coverage if you can't sustain 8+ weeks without mining revenue. Most operators don't think about this until a facility issue creates a 6-week gap. The BI rider costs roughly $140-185/year on a 10-machine fleet — less than 2 days of net mining profit.
  • Set up automated BTC withdrawal from your pool wallet on a weekly schedule. Pool platforms support automated on-chain withdrawals — set them up to sweep to your hardware wallet every Tuesday. You cannot lose what's already in cold storage. Revenue risk left in pool accounts unnecessarily is risk that insurance won't cover.
  • Use the deal analyzer to score risk before every capital commitment. Our deal analyzer includes a risk scoring dimension covering contract length, facility risk, and leverage — it surfaces contractual risk factors that affect your insurance and risk management decisions before you commit capital.

The Bottom Line

Bitcoin mining insurance is straightforward and inexpensive relative to the assets it protects. The right coverage for most operators: equipment insurance (through hosting provider inclusion or commercial inland marine) covering fire, theft, flood, and electrical damage, plus a business interruption rider for revenue protection. Total cost: 0.3-0.5% of annual net profit. The non-insurable risks — BTC price, difficulty, hosting provider failure — are managed through hardware quality, contract vetting, operating reserves, and facility diversification at scale.

Start at Abundant Miners where equipment insurance is included in the flat $225/month hosting fee. Use our deal analyzer to score any deal's risk profile before committing capital, and our profitability audit for a complete written risk and profitability analysis of your specific setup. Visit abundantmines.com to discuss your situation with the team directly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does standard business insurance cover Bitcoin miners?

Standard commercial property insurance can cover Bitcoin mining hardware as business equipment, but the details matter. Many general commercial property policies have exclusions for electronic equipment above a certain value, require hardware to be listed specifically as scheduled equipment, or have exclusions for cryptocurrency-related assets. Always ask your insurer directly: "Does this policy cover Bitcoin mining hardware (ASICs) operated at a third-party colocation facility?" Get the answer in writing. If unclear, commercial inland marine insurance is a cleaner solution — it's designed for valuable equipment in transit or at third-party locations.

Does Abundant Miners insure my equipment?

Abundant Miners includes equipment insurance as part of their $225/month flat-fee hosting. This is one of the most important differentiators between hosting providers — most facilities require you to arrange your own equipment insurance or explicitly disclaim liability for hardware damage or theft. Always confirm the specific coverage terms (what events are covered, per-unit coverage limit, claims process) with any hosting provider before deploying hardware. The inclusion of equipment insurance in a flat-fee structure significantly simplifies the insurance decision for smaller operators.

What risks should I insure against in Bitcoin mining?

The insurable risks in Bitcoin mining are the physical and operational ones: hardware theft, fire/flood/water damage at the facility, electrical surge damage, and business interruption from extended downtime caused by a covered event. The non-insurable risks — Bitcoin price decline, network difficulty increases, hosting provider insolvency, wallet hacks, and general revenue volatility — must be managed through operational and financial planning rather than insurance. Focus insurance coverage on the hardware asset value; manage the economic risks through hardware quality, hosting contract vetting, and operating reserves.

How much does Bitcoin mining equipment insurance cost?

Equipment insurance for mining hardware typically costs 1-2% of insured value annually for commercial inland marine policies. For 10 S21 Pros worth $38,000, expect $380-760/year. For 50 S21 Pros worth $190,000, expect $1,900-3,800/year. Business interruption riders add 20-40% to the base premium. Some specialty insurers that cover crypto mining infrastructure charge 1.5-3% annually due to the higher perceived risk of the asset class. Compare against what your hosting provider includes in their fee — if equipment insurance is included, the premium is already built into the hosting rate.

What happens to my insurance claim if a mining facility has a fire or flood?

When a covered event occurs at a hosting facility, the claims process depends on who holds the insurance. If your hosting provider's facility insurance covers your hardware: the provider files the claim with their insurer; you coordinate with the provider for replacement or compensation. If you hold your own equipment insurance: you file the claim directly; your insurer coordinates with the facility for damage assessment; replacement hardware is procured and the insurer pays up to your policy limit. In either case: document your hardware serial numbers, purchase receipts, and photos before deployment — they're required for any claim. Without documentation, claims can be delayed or reduced significantly.

Do I need business interruption insurance for Bitcoin mining?

Business interruption insurance pays lost revenue during periods when your operation is halted by a covered event (fire, flood, major equipment failure). For Bitcoin mining, this translates to: lost mining revenue during the period from damage event to hardware replacement/restart. For a 10-machine operation generating $22,500/month net, a 6-week downtime costs $33,750 in lost revenue. A business interruption rider on your equipment policy costs approximately $200-400/year on a 10-machine fleet — a reasonable premium for that protection. Evaluate whether your operating reserve (ideally 3 months of net profit) would cover a major downtime event; if not, the BI rider is worth it.

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