Who this is for: Hosts who have already completed the technical setup process and have machines ready to list. This guide covers the economic decisions; that is, the settings and strategies that affect your ranking, occupancy, and revenue.
Understanding Your Market Position
Before tuning any individual setting, it helps to understand where your supply sits relative to demand. Your listing competes with others for customer attention, and your goal is to find the combination of price, availability, and configuration that maximizes your total revenue over time. Revenue isn’t just about price. It’s the product of your price per hour and your occupancy rate (the percentage of time your machines are rented). A high price with low occupancy can easily earn less than a moderate price with strong utilization. Every setting in this guide affects that balance. Customers filter and sort listings by a variety of criteria, most commonly by verification status, duration, and disk space. If your listing doesn’t pass these filters, it won’t appear in search results regardless of how competitive your price is.Duration
Duration controls how long a rental contract can last. It’s one of the most impactful settings because it affects both the type of customer you attract and the stability of your revenue. The core tradeoff: Longer durations tend to increase expected earnings because customers value the guaranteed availability. However, you are locked into your pricing terms for the full contract length. For example, if market rates rise, you can’t adjust mid-contract.Customer Segments by Duration
Different customer types have very different duration preferences. Understanding this helps you target the right segment for your hardware:Pricing
Pricing is the most direct lever for your earnings, but the optimal price isn’t simply “as high as possible.” Rather, it’s the rate that maximizes total revenue given your hardware, competition, and current market conditions. The core tradeoff: Higher prices increase revenue per rental hour, but reduce occupancy. Lower prices fill your machines faster, but each hour earns less. The optimum sits somewhere in the middle and shifts with supply and demand.On-Demand Pricing
Your primary listing price. Use market data and your competitors’ pricing as a reference point. Consider your hardware’s relative performance, your verification status, and your reliability track record, as these all affect how customers evaluate your listing against alternatives.Interruptible Pricing (Min Bid Price)
This is one of the most commonly misconfigured settings. The Min Bid Price is a floor for the bidding system, not an on-demand price. Customers bid above this floor, and competition among bidders will drive the actual price higher. Many hosts set their interruptible floor too high because they treat it like their on-demand rate. This is a mistake. When your machines are idle, you earn nothing. A well-set interruptible floor ensures your GPUs are working even during low-demand periods. Recommended strategy: Set your Min Bid Price close to your cost of power when the GPU is under load. At this floor, you’re at least covering your electricity costs during idle periods. Bidders will typically pay above this floor, so your actual interruptible revenue will be higher. If no one bids, consider running your own background jobs on the otherwise-idle hardware.Disk Pricing
Disk pricing depends on how much storage you have relative to what clients need:Internet Bandwidth Pricing
This depends entirely on your network setup. If you have fast, unmetered upstream internet, you can price bandwidth low or even at zero, as this is a strong competitive advantage. If your network has QoS controls or internal metering, set a reasonable bandwidth price to prevent any single client from saturating your connection and degrading service for others.Min GPU Configuration
The Min GPU setting controls the smallest GPU partition you offer. For an 8-GPU machine, this determines whether customers can rent 1, 2, 4, or 8 GPUs at a time. It’s a critical lever for balancing demand capture against utilization efficiency. The core tradeoff: Smaller minimums (e.g., 1x) let you serve more customers and fill individual GPU slots, but create fragmentation. Partial rentals can leave awkward, hard-to-fill gaps, leading to underutilization. Larger minimums (e.g., 8x) eliminate fragmentation but limit your audience to customers who need a full node.How It Works
When you set a Min GPU value, the platform creates listings at all powers of two from your minimum up to the total GPUs in the machine. For example, on an 8-GPU machine with Min GPU set to 2, listings are created for 2x, 4x, and 8x configurations.Recommended Approach
If you operate multiple machines, distribute your Min GPU settings across them rather than using the same value everywhere. A healthy mix might look like this:
This approach lets you capture demand across all configuration sizes while keeping fragmentation in check. Market data suggests there is meaningful demand for both 1x and 8x configurations, with approximately twice as much search volume for 8x rentals as for 1x.
The optimal mix depends on current market conditions, so be sure to consider what your competitors are offering and where unmet demand exists. Review your utilization patterns and adjust periodically.