How it works
Cryptoservers rents KVM virtual private servers and bare-metal dedicated machines across four offshore datacenters: Reykjavík, Amsterdam, Bucharest and Zurich. The corporate entity is registered in Saint Kitts and Nevis, outside the 14-Eyes alliance and outside the reach of the US DMCA. A customer picks a plan, a location, an operating system and a payment coin — the checkout generates a one-shot swap that settles into the operator's treasury, and the VPS is online in a median of 41 seconds from payment confirmation. Dedicated servers take two to four hours because racking and IPMI setup happen by hand.
The VPS lineup runs from $16.99/mo (2 vCPU, 4 GB RAM, 60 GB NVMe) to $69/mo (12 vCPU, 32 GB, 640 GB NVMe). Dedicated tiers span $79/mo for entry-level single-socket boxes up to $599/mo for dual-socket 96-core builds with IPMI and a four-hour hardware-swap SLA. Every product includes 1 Tbps of anycast DDoS scrubbing with optional L7 rules.
KYC & privacy
There is no KYC in the strict sense: no ID, no selfie, no proof of address, no phone number, no billing name. The only personal field collected at checkout is a working email — the published FAQ explicitly allows a disposable or aliased address. There are no fiat payment rails at all, so there is no credit-card billing name to cross-reference and no acquirer retention obligation.
Access logs are not kept per published policy, and a warrant canary is refreshed weekly at /canary/. Law-enforcement cooperation is limited by the Acceptable Use Policy to valid court orders from the registered jurisdictions — in practice, US DMCA notices and 14-Eyes takedowns are not honoured. Tor exit relays, Wireguard, Monero nodes and staking infrastructure are explicitly permitted; CSAM, active DDoS attacks, spam and identity-theft operations are not.
Strengths and limits
The posture is the selling point. A Saint Kitts corporate shell plus infrastructure outside US jurisdiction removes the safe-harbour lever that most American providers respond to; four separately-governed datacenters give customers a real choice of legal forum. Seven-coin crypto billing (BTC, XMR, LTC, ETH, DASH, BCH, DOGE) with no fiat fallback means there is no issuer that can be pressured into reversing payments. Deployment speed is genuine — 41-second VPS provisioning is faster than most white-label clouds that still require a credit card.
The limits are the ones that follow from a young operator. Cryptoservers was founded in May 2024, which means it has not yet weathered a coordinated legal or DDoS pressure campaign in public. The stack is closed source with no third-party audit, and there is no published onion mirror at the time of writing. An email address is still required at signup — it is not an anonymous-account-number protocol like Mullvad, and users should treat the address as a correlation hazard and use an alias accordingly.
Verdict
Cryptoservers is a credible offshore host for anyone who needs a VPS without handing over a government ID or a credit card. The grade below reflects a short public track record rather than any privacy red flag — ship it, use an email alias, and re-evaluate once the canary has accumulated two or three more years of weekly entries. B · TRUSTED.
A credible no-KYC offshore host run out of four jurisdictions that do not honour US takedowns. A weekly warrant canary, annually-audited operating books, and a clean track since May 2024 lift this above the median offshore host, even with a closed-source billing stack. Grade: A- (8.9/10). Trust: TRUSTED.

