Anonymous offshore VPS and dedicated servers in seven jurisdictions — zero personal data, 16-char token auth, 14 crypto rails (BTC, XMR, USDC) and a public agent-purchasable API (MCP, REST, x402-light) for AI clients.
Pros and cons +5 −4
- ✓ No KYC: email-only signup, throwaway addresses explicitly accepted
- ✓ Seven crypto payment options, with merchant-side settlement in Monero
- ✓ Four offshore datacentres (Iceland, Netherlands, Romania, Switzerland)
- ✓ Up to 1 Tbps DDoS protection included on all plans
- ✓ Transparent hardware specs (AMD EPYC / Xeon, ECC RAM, NVMe) at competitive pricing
- ✕ Closed source with no independent infrastructure audit published
- ✕ Brand new provider — no multi-year uptime or reputation record
- ✕ No Tor onion endpoint for payment or control panel
- ✕ Retention and warrant-handling policy not publicly documented
Quick facts
At a glance 5/5
Full review
BitVPS is a 2026-launched offshore hosting provider selling virtual private servers and bare-metal dedicated servers exclusively for cryptocurrency. The company is incorporated in Saint Kitts & Nevis and operates datacentre presence in four jurisdictions — Iceland (Reykjavík), the Netherlands (Amsterdam), Romania (Bucharest), and Switzerland (Zurich) — all chosen for their relatively light touch on content takedown and privacy-friendly legal regimes. There is no phone verification, no identity check, and no address-of-residence requirement.
How it works
Users pick a location, a plan (Starter VPS at $16.99/month up to the top-tier "Citadel" dedicated at $599/month for a dual-socket 96-core / 192-thread system) and a cryptocurrency. Supported payment coins are Bitcoin, Monero, Litecoin, Ethereum, Dash, Bitcoin Cash and Dogecoin. Orders are captured through a /deploy/ flow, then routed to a /pay/<order-id>/ invoice backed by an on-chain swap that settles the merchant in Monero regardless of which coin the customer sends. Hardware is AMD EPYC or Intel Xeon, DDR4/DDR5 ECC memory, NVMe storage, and each node is fronted by DDoS mitigation rated up to 1 Tbps.
KYC & privacy
There is no KYC tier, no document upload, and no phone field anywhere in the signup flow. The provider collects only a working email address — and its own terms explicitly permit throwaway addresses, so most tutanota / disroot / mail.bz boxes go through. Billing data does not exist because payments are one-shot crypto invoices; there is no saved card, no stored customer balance, and no recurring card-on-file. Logs are not publicly documented, which is a gap — established offshore providers (Njalla, 1984 Hosting) publish retention policies explicitly, and BitVPS should follow suit. Server-side disk encryption is the customer's responsibility; the provider does not encrypt VM images at rest by default.
Strengths and limits
The positioning is unambiguous and the payment architecture is genuinely privacy-forward — settling in Monero rather than forwarding the customer's original coin to a custodial bank means the on-chain trail ends at a swap rather than at the hosting company. Four offshore jurisdictions give meaningful failover if one country tightens its rules. The pricing is competitive against Njalla and well below BuyVM's fiat pricing for comparable specs.
The limits are those of every new provider. There is no multi-year uptime record, no published audit of the infrastructure, no transparency report of warrant or takedown volumes, and the website is closed source — so independent verification of the stack is currently impossible. There is no Tor onion address listed, which most privacy-conscious competitors offer as a table-stakes feature. Dedicated-server provisioning is not instant, and abuse-policy wording around complaint handling is thin.
Verdict
BitVPS earns a 7.6/10 on this site's methodology — a solid "no-KYC, crypto-only" offering that matches what established competitors deliver at the anonymity layer, held back from a higher score by the absence of a track record, audit, transparency report, and onion endpoint. Classification: L1 anonymous — no identity checks at signup, only a working (throwaway-friendly) email address. A year of clean operation plus an audit or published transparency report would push this comfortably into the 8-range.
Alternatives & related
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Anonymous domain registrar, VPS and VPN provider founded by Pirate Bay co-founder Peter Sunde. Njalla legally owns the domains on your behalf, paid for in Bitcoin or Monero, and runs a Tor onion mirror for every service.
Offshore VPS, dedicated servers, and 26-TLD domain registration across four privacy jurisdictions — France, Iceland, Switzerland, Romania. Email-only signup, crypto payment (BTC/XMR + 8), free WHOIS privacy.
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