The homelab hobby spent years chasing cheap used enterprise gear — until people saw their power bills. In 2026 the smart move is low-power hardware that idles in single digits of watts, because for most self-hosting the bottleneck is never CPU horsepower. Here’s what’s worth buying, ranked by efficiency.
The short answer: build around an Intel N100-class mini-PC (idles ~7 W) or a Raspberry Pi 5 (~4 W) for compute, pair it with a small NAS or SSD storage, and use an efficient mini-PC firewall. The whole setup can run 24/7 for the price of a few coffees a year.
The efficiency ranking
All figures are from our wattage database, with annual cost at the US average of $0.17/kWh, running 24/7. “Idle” is what matters most — see idle vs load watts for why.
| Device | Role | Idle W | US $/yr (24/7) | Germany €/yr |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raspberry Pi 5 | Light compute / HA | 4 | $5.96 | €14.02 |
| Intel N100 mini-PC | Proxmox / Docker host | 7 | $10.42 | €24.53 |
| pfSense/OPNsense mini-PC | Firewall / router | 8 | $11.91 | €28.03 |
| Used 1L office PC | Cheap node | 8 | $11.91 | €28.03 |
| External USB SSD | Fast storage | 1 | $1.49 | €3.50 |
| Synology DS224+ | 2-bay NAS | 6 | $8.94 | €21.02 |
| TP-Link 8-port switch | Networking | 3 | $4.47 | €10.51 |
Estimates at 24/7 operation, $0.17/kWh and €0.40/kWh. Source: HomelabWatts, data as of 2026-06-14.
The best low-power compute: N100 mini-PC
The Intel N100 (and its N97/N150 siblings) is the default 2026 homelab box for good reason. It idles around 7 W, is often fanless, runs Proxmox and a dozen containers happily, and costs about $10/year to run continuously in the US. For light workloads it’s hard to beat on performance-per-watt.
When you genuinely need more — heavy transcoding, local LLMs, many VMs — step up to a Ryzen mini-PC or a low-power Supermicro Xeon-D build (idles ~30 W), which is still vastly more efficient than rack enterprise gear.
The best ultra-low-power option: Raspberry Pi 5
For Home Assistant, Pi-hole, a reverse proxy or a handful of light containers, a Raspberry Pi 5 idles at about 4 W — roughly $6/year. It’s the lowest-draw option that’s still genuinely useful. The trade-offs are ARM compatibility quirks, slower I/O (mitigated by an NVMe HAT) and less RAM headroom than x86.
Storage: SSD where you can, few drives where you can’t
Storage is where low-power builds quietly win or lose. Key principles:
- SSDs draw ~1-4 W; spinning 3.5-inch HDDs draw 4-8 W each plus spin-up surges.
- A 2-bay NAS like the DS224+ idles around 6 W — cheap to run.
- Fewer, larger drives beat many small ones on both watts and noise.
If you don’t need bulk capacity, an external USB SSD on your mini-PC is the most efficient storage there is. See how much it costs to run a NAS 24/7 for the storage deep-dive.
Networking: small fixed cost
Networking gear is usually a small, fixed background cost and not worth optimizing hard. An unmanaged 8-port gigabit switch draws ~3 W; managed switches and PoE add more, but the powered devices (cameras, APs) dominate any PoE budget, not the switch itself.
What to avoid in 2026
The one purchase that wrecks a low-power lab is a cheap used rack server. A Dell R720 idling at 110 W costs about $164/year in the US and €385/year in Germany — often more than a whole low-power setup costs to buy. Unless you specifically need its RAM, drive bays or IPMI, skip it. Compare the lifetime numbers in our mini-PC vs rack server 3-year cost breakdown, then size your own picks in the calculator.
The bottom line
In 2026, efficient is also cheap, quiet and plenty fast for self-hosting. Start with an N100 mini-PC or a Pi 5, keep storage lean, and you’ll run a capable lab 24/7 for less than the cost of a streaming subscription. Look up any device’s exact figures on the wattage database or compare them side by side.