Most hosting providers ask for a passport scan and a credit card before they'll rent you a $3 virtual machine. That's a strange trade for something that costs less than a coffee — so we don't make it.
An email address and a stablecoin transfer. That's the whole signup.
What we don't ask for
- No identity documents.
- No credit card — we don't even accept them as the primary method.
- No phone number.
- No verification queue, no "your account is under review", no support ticket to prove you're real.
You register, you pay in USDC or USDT, and your server is running about a minute later with full root access.
What anonymity here actually means — honestly
This is where most no-KYC pages start overselling. We'd rather be straight with you, because the people who care about this care about accuracy.
What's true: we hold no identity documents about you. There is no card in your legal name on file. We don't require, collect, or verify who you are.
What's also true, and worth understanding:
- Your server has a public IP address, and its traffic is visible to the networks it crosses. A VPS is not a Tor circuit.
- Stablecoin transfers are recorded on a public blockchain. Base, Ethereum, and Tron are transparent ledgers, not private ones. If the wallet you pay from is tied to your identity somewhere else, that link exists whether or not we know about it.
- If you buy your USDT on an exchange with a card, that exchange almost certainly ran its own identity check. Ours is the step that doesn't — theirs usually does.
- We keep the basic operational data any host needs to run servers, and we comply with the law where the hardware sits.
So: no KYC, genuinely. Total anonymity against a determined adversary, no — and any host telling you otherwise is selling you something.
What people actually use this for
Privacy-conscious people are not, mostly, doing anything exotic. In practice: a personal VPN, a Telegram bot, a small site they don't want tied to a corporate identity, a trading bot, a scraper, an AI agent, a project under a pseudonym. The common thread is simply not wanting a hosting account welded to a legal identity for a $3 machine.
That's it. That's the market. It doesn't need justifying.
Rules — because "no KYC" is not "no rules"
We'll terminate a server for spam, malware, botnets, attacks on other networks, or content that's illegal where our hardware lives. Not because we're checking up on you, but because those things get the whole node taken offline and ruin it for everyone else on it.
Privacy, yes. Abuse, no.
How paying works
Pick a plan, and at checkout you'll get an address, a QR code, and a network — Base, Ethereum, or Tron. Send USDC or USDT on the same network shown (this is the one mistake that costs people money), and the server activates by itself, usually in under a minute. Send a little extra by accident and the surplus lands on your account balance.
Never done this before? The five-minute guide covers buying stablecoins and sending them correctly.
Plans
| Plan | Price | |
|---|---|---|
| Small bot, VPN, or side project | Nano | $3/mo |
| A bit more room | Micro | $5/mo |
| Own public IP, all ports, run a site or mail | Nano-IP | $8/mo |
| The comfortable default | Small | $8/mo |
Full root, NVMe (RAID1), unmetered traffic at 1 Gbit/s, Ubuntu / Debian / AlmaLinux, servers in Germany and Finland. Yearly billing means one crypto transfer instead of twelve.
Ready? Pick a plan → — email to register, crypto to pay, running in about a minute.