How it works
NoKYCSwap is a routing frontend. The user picks a pair, receives a single-use deposit address, and sends the source coin. The order metadata is forwarded to ff.io — named in the operator's own transparency page as the upstream liquidity router — which executes the swap and forwards the output asset to the user-supplied destination. The service's own servers never hold funds; deposit addresses are provisioned by the upstream and retired after settlement. Storage is flat JSON on a PHP 8.2/nginx stack with a 24-hour IP rotation and a 30-day order retention ceiling. Seventy-plus assets and more than twenty chains are listed, from BTC and Lightning to XMR, ETH, USDT on Tron and Solana, plus a long tail of altcoins.
KYC & privacy
There is no signup, no email field, no identity demand anywhere in the user-facing flow. The /aml/ page specifies that refunds are issued without ID documents, ever in the operator's wording. What the site is candid about is the upstream AML surface: ff.io screens deposits against OFAC, EU, UN, and UK sanctions lists plus chain-analytics risk feeds. If a flag trips, the order page enters an Emergency state offering a refund to a user-supplied address; the user can also choose to proceed at market rate. This is the honest L2 reading — no KYC at the frontend, but the AML layer lives one hop upstream and can hold a swap. Treat it as FixedFloat's exposure passed through a cleaner UI.
Strengths and limits
The frontend is disciplined in what it asks. No email, no cookies, no third-party analytics — the posture matches the marketing copy for once. The refund clause is the single best sentence on the site: a flagged deposit returns without ID. Pair coverage is wide and the single-use address pattern is standard hygiene. The limits are the ones a careful reader anticipates. The team is pseudonymous and the jurisdiction unstated. There is no public source repository, no third-party audit, no onion address, no warrant canary. The copyright reads 2026 — this is a new service with no scar tissue — and rate quality, uptime, and dispute behaviour track whatever ff.io is doing on any given day. If the upstream tightens its screening or its spreads, nokycswap users feel it first.
Verdict
For a privacy-minded user who already trusts FixedFloat and simply wants an unbranded front door, NoKYCSwap is a competent wrapper — the anonymity story on the visible layer holds up. For anyone expecting independent liquidity, an auditable team, or a track record to weigh, it is not that, and the transparency page does not pretend otherwise. Grade: C (6.6/10). Trust: CAUTION.
For a privacy-minded user who already trusts FixedFloat and wants an unbranded front door, this is a competent wrapper. For anyone looking for independent liquidity, an auditable team, or any track record to weigh, look elsewhere. Grade: C (6.6/10). Trust: CAUTION.



