NoKycVPS sells KVM virtual private servers, bare-metal dedicated boxes, and domain registration across 26 TLDs from four jurisdictions — France, Iceland, Switzerland, and Romania. The credential is an email and a password; nothing else is asked at signup, and nothing else is asked later either.
How it works
A visitor signs up at /signup with an email and a password. There is no captcha, no email-verification step, and no SMS OTP. The dashboard exposes three product surfaces — VPS, dedicated, domains — each priced against a USD-equivalent balance the user funds from a deposit address.
Funding is crypto-only. The invoice flow supports ten coins (BTC, XMR, ETH, USDT-TRC20, USDC-ETH, LTC, SOL, TRX, DOGE, BCH), with a top-up bonus that climbs from +30% at $100 to +70% at $1000. The same balance pays for any product on the platform, which makes domain renewals or VPS upgrades a one-click affair after the first deposit.
Hardware is current-generation. VPS lines are NVMe KVM hosts in Paris, Reykjavík, Zürich, and Bucharest. Dedicated servers run AMD Ryzen 9 7950X, EPYC 9354, and EPYC 9654 with DDR5 ECC, PCIe 5 NVMe, and 10 Gbps unmetered uplinks. IPMI is reached via a private VPN, not exposed on the public internet — a small but real operational hardening.
KYC and privacy
There is no KYC step anywhere in the funnel. The terms of service and the acceptable-use policy prohibit the standard abuse categories — CSAM, malware command-and-control, mass spam — but enforcement does not lean on identity disclosure. The platform's public OpenAPI confirms the auth flow: a session cookie plus a CSRF token, and that is it.
The honest caveat is the custodial balance. Once paid into, deposits sit on the operator's books until the user spends them. There is a refund path, but the operator could in principle freeze a balance. Crypto rails debit the balance — they do not re-emit funds as a withdrawal. Anyone using NoKycVPS to park large sums between purchases is doing it wrong.
Strengths and limits
The four jurisdictions are the right four. France for EU-adjacent low-friction routing, Iceland for content that does not survive in Frankfurt, Switzerland for a financial-services posture, Romania for the EPYC pricing. Hardware specs are quoted, not hand-waved, and the terms explicitly promise "same price at renewal" on domain TLDs — a meaningful commitment given how routinely registrars bait-and-switch.
The shortcomings are the predictable ones for a young product. There is no third-party audit, no SOC 2 or equivalent. The codebase is not open source. The public uptime SLA dashboard does not exist yet — the status page is a JSON ping rather than a public incident history. Domain registration is not yet fully automated; an order completes with a 24-hour human-finalization window. The API itself still uses session cookies — Bearer tokens are on the roadmap.
Verdict
A pragmatic operator built a quiet, deliberate no-KYC hosting platform that does the actual work — anonymous signup, crypto-only billing, hardware that meets the spec sheet. Grade B / 7.2. Privacy posture is unusually clean for the segment; the only material drag on the score is the custodial balance and the youth of the product. Trust level: TRUSTED.
Grade B / 7.2. A young product from an established operator, with a small custody tax on user balances and a roadmap that still has gaps — but the signup and payment flow is exactly what no-KYC hosting should look like. Trust level: TRUSTED.

