TBC mining is a two-commodity business, and most miners work the wrong ore for their realm's economy. Here is how Fel Iron and Adamantite actually differ — and where each pays.

Fel Iron: the volume ore

Fel Iron spawns everywhere from Hellfire Peninsula onward, feeding early blacksmithing, engineering bulk crafts and the eternal leveling-profession demand. Prices per bar are modest but volume moves relentlessly — every new alt levels a profession on Fel Iron. Best routes: the Hellfire ring road and Zangarmarsh's edge circuits, both flyable in relaxed loops.

Adamantite: the margin ore

Adamantite is where the money concentrates: it prospects into TBC gems (the jewelcrafting cut economy we covered runs on it), feeds high-end smithing, and its ore-to-bar demand spikes with every crafted-epic phase. Nagrand owns the density crown — the rim circuit around the zone perimeter — with Netherstorm as the contested backup.

The rich-vein lottery

Rich Adamantite nodes and the occasional Khorium spawn turn a steady route into a jackpot route. Khorium sells at luxury prices all expansion because it spawns as a rare replacement node — never farm FOR it, always be pleasantly surprised BY it.

Route economics in 2026

  • Fel Iron loop: lower gold per node, near-zero competition, perfect for half-attention farming.
  • Nagrand Adamantite rim: 80-130 gold per focused hour on most realms once prospecting demand is healthy.
  • Check your realm: if Adamantite trades under 2x Fel Iron, the volume ore wins that week.

The miner's honest math

Mining is gathering: time-linear, meditative, capped. It funds consumables beautifully and epic mounts slowly. Ride the routes for the steady drip — and when a deadline purchase looms larger than the drip can fill, the shortfall is a solved problem these days rather than a second job.