Clear answers for a new residential category.
NexaHEarth is pre-launch, so some details remain subject to technical, legal, market, and program review.
NexaHEarth is a pre-launch residential technology infrastructure company developing a network of professionally installed home-based compute units in approved homes.
No. NexaHEarth is not a solar company. Power readiness may be reviewed during eligibility, but the core concept is residential technology infrastructure, not rooftop energy generation.
Not in the way most people picture a data center. The planned unit is a compact, managed appliance intended for an approved garage, utility, or similar space. We use the comparison only to explain that it performs real compute work.
The unit is expected to perform managed compute workloads as part of a larger network. It is not intended to access your personal devices, files, or household data.
Eligibility depends on location, property type, available space, electrical readiness, internet options, local requirements, and market availability. Registration starts the review process but does not guarantee approval.
The program is being designed around residential expectations, including quiet operation. Final acoustic details will be confirmed before installation and each site will be reviewed.
Compute equipment produces heat, so site review will consider ventilation, location, and operating conditions. Final thermal requirements will be provided before any approved installation.
Final power requirements have not been published. Electrical readiness is part of the eligibility review, and no homeowner should assume participation before a qualified review.
The network is planned around managed connectivity and performance requirements. Your current internet type helps NexaHEarth understand potential readiness, but final requirements may vary.
NexaHEarth expects approved installations to be completed by trained professional partners, such as qualified installers, electricians, and implementation teams.
The planned program includes professional monitoring, service, and maintenance. Homeowners should not be expected to repair or modify the unit themselves.
Safety review is part of the planned qualification process. Final equipment, installation, electrical, permitting, and operating requirements will need to satisfy applicable standards and local requirements.
The planned architecture is intended to keep the managed unit separate from personal home devices and data. Final privacy and network terms will be provided before launch.
Approved hosts may receive program benefits, cost offsets, or other compensation depending on final program terms. Registration does not guarantee compensation.
Any calculator figures shown on this site are illustrative placeholders only. Final program terms, payments, cost offsets, and eligibility are subject to technical review, market availability, contract terms, utility requirements, and applicable law.
No. Compensation is not guaranteed. Final eligibility, operation, availability, and payment terms are subject to review and signed program documents.
Not yet. NexaHEarth is pre-launch and reviewing interest. Future availability is subject to market rollout, site qualification, and local requirements.
Renters may register interest, but participation would likely require property-owner approval and other site approvals. Final renter requirements have not been published.
Final requirements have not been published. NexaHEarth expects to review whether the person submitting has appropriate ownership authority, landlord approval, or other legal permission before any approved participation.
HOA status is part of the eligibility review. Some communities may require notice, approval, or additional documentation before any installation.
Permitting requirements vary by location and installation scope. NexaHEarth and its partners expect to evaluate applicable requirements before any approved deployment.
Insurance, utility, metering, rate-plan, and service requirements may vary by property and jurisdiction. These items must be reviewed before any final approval or installation.
Yes. Local code, permitting, lease terms, landlord approval, HOA rules, utility requirements, and property-specific limitations may affect whether a site can participate.
No. Pre-launch registration is non-binding and does not obligate you to host equipment or accept final program terms.
NexaHEarth may review your information, prioritize markets, request additional details, and contact you if your home appears to fit an upcoming review phase.
Yes. Installers, electricians, builders, dealers, home technology professionals, and infrastructure partners can submit interest through the partner page.
Yes. Qualified investors and strategic groups can submit an inquiry through the investor page or contact page.
