Virtual phone numbers for SMS verification AND long-term rental — 190+ countries × 1000+ services, seed-phrase auth, 14 crypto rails (BTC, XMR, USDC...) and a public agent-purchasable API (MCP, REST) for AI clients.
Pros and cons +5 −4
- ✓ Covers the whole no-KYC stack in one place: exchanges, wallets, VPNs, SMS verification, email and hosting
- ✓ Consistent four-axis grading — privacy, custody, transparency, track record — makes very different services directly comparable
- ✓ Nothing to sell: it reviews services rather than operating one, removing the usual affiliate and upsell conflict of interest
- ✓ No signup and no logs to browse; the directory holds itself to the same privacy standard it grades others on
- ✓ Crypto-privacy-focused editorial written for users who think in threat models, not generic comparison-shopping traffic
- ✕ Grades are editorial judgment, not audits — a directory cannot verify a provider's internal data practices from the outside
- ✕ The no-KYC landscape moves fast; a service can quietly tighten its policies before a listing catches up, so always verify current terms before use
- ✕ It is a first-party property of this network, so this listing is partly a self-review — weigh it accordingly
- ✕ Editorial-only reviews mean no user ratings or community feedback to cross-check against
Quick facts
At a glance 3/3
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No signup required
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Web app
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Available worldwide
Full review
SkipKYC tackles a real gap in the no-KYC world: plenty of services claim to respect privacy, and very little neutral information exists about which ones deserve the claim. It is a directory, not a provider — it reviews no-KYC crypto and web services and sells nothing itself, which removes the most common conflict of interest in this niche.
How it works
The catalog spans exchanges, wallets, VPNs, SMS verification, email and hosting. Every listed service is graded on the same four axes: privacy (what data a service actually demands and retains), custody (who ends up holding your funds or keys), transparency (how openly the operator communicates about policies and incidents) and track record (how the service has behaved over time, not what its landing page promises). Grading everything on one rubric makes very different services — a swap exchange and a hosting provider, say — directly comparable.KYC & privacy
Using SkipKYC asks nothing of you: no signup, no account, no logs. You read the reviews and leave. The editorial line is explicitly crypto-privacy focused, written for people who think in threat models rather than for casual comparison shoppers, and the site itself operates at the standard it grades others against.Strengths and limits
The strength is scope plus consistency: one rubric across the whole no-KYC stack, from an outlet with no product of its own to push. The honest limit is inherent to any directory: editors can evaluate public behavior and history, but they cannot audit a provider's internal databases. Treat grades as strong starting points, verify current terms yourself, and note that SkipKYC is a first-party property of this network — we hold it to the same criteria as everyone else, but you should weigh that affiliation as you read.Alternatives & related
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