Nvidia will pay your electric bill if you host an AI server at home

The proposed program would spread AI computing across residential properties rather than massive server farms

A new distributed computing project powered by Nvidia aims to turn residential properties into mini AI hubs | ©Image Credit: Unsplash / Mariia Shalabaieva
A new distributed computing project powered by Nvidia aims to turn residential properties into mini AI hubs | ©Image Credit: Unsplash / Mariia Shalabaieva

Most people hear “data center” and think of giant warehouses, endless server racks, and neighborhoods fighting new construction projects. But Nvidia has a different idea.

Instead of building everything in massive facilities, the AI giant is backing a system that could place small AI servers right inside individual homes. In return, homeowners could get their electricity and internet bills completely covered.

Your house could become part of the AI infrastructure

AI needs an enormous amount of computing power, and demand is growing much faster than companies can build new data centers. To help close that gap, Nvidia has partnered with SPAN on a project called XFRA.

The goal is to create a distributed network of AI computing hubs located in residential and small commercial properties. Instead of one giant data center, you get thousands of smaller ones spread across a grid.

The system would install a compact AI compute node on a participating property. Each unit uses a specialized, liquid-cooled server node built on Nvidia’s powerful Blackwell architecture, designed to operate quietly while handling heavy cloud computing workloads.

According to the companies, these systems would tap into excess electrical capacity that isn’t being used by the home. Your appliances and everyday power needs always come first, while the AI hardware runs purely on the surplus.

Don’t expect giant data centers to disappear

This isn’t a replacement for traditional AI facilities. Training cutting-edge AI models still requires enormous, centralized data centers packed with thousands of interconnected GPUs.

Instead, XFRA is targeting a different part of the market: “edge” computing. The network could help support everyday cloud services, AI applications, content delivery networks (CDNs), streaming platforms, and cloud gaming. Think of it less as replacing data centers and more as adding extra computing capacity wherever space is available.

Ultimately, the idea feels like a mashup of Airbnb and cloud computing. For years, homeowners have rented out spare bedrooms, driveways, and backyard sheds. If Nvidia’s experiment works, your next side hustle might involve renting out your spare electricity.