
KYC (Know Your Customer) verification means uploading your passport, driver's license, and sometimes a selfie or proof of address to an exchange before you can trade. For many users, this isn't just inconvenient — it's a fundamental privacy concern.
💡 Is it legal? Using no-KYC instant swap services is legal in the vast majority of countries. These platforms operate in the non-custodial space and are distinct from regulated money service businesses.
Platforms like Superswap.cx act as liquidity routers. You specify what you're sending, what you want, and your receiving address — they execute the swap without holding your funds or knowing who you are. This is the easiest method with the best UX.
Uniswap, THORSwap, and similar platforms run entirely on-chain. No company controls them. However, they require a Web3 wallet (MetaMask etc.), typically don't support privacy coins like XMR, and Ethereum gas fees can be significant for smaller swaps.
Platforms like Bisq and Haveno connect buyers and sellers directly. Maximum privacy, but requires patience — you need to find a counterparty, negotiate, and wait. Best for large XMR/BTC trades where privacy is paramount over speed.
Instant exchange · No KYC · No registration · 56 pairs
Start Swapping on Superswap.cx →No account creation. No email. No registration of any kind.
Choose from 56 pairs including BTC, ETH, XMR, ZEC, LTC, SOL, USDT-ERC20, and USDT-TRC20.
This is where your swapped coins will arrive. Must be a wallet you control — not another exchange.
We generate a one-time deposit address for you to send your coins to.
Send from your wallet. Track your order at /track. Funds arrive in 5–30 minutes.
| Platform | No KYC | XMR | Ease of Use | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Superswap.cx | ✓ Always | ✓ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | 5–30 min |
| Uniswap | ✓ | No XMR | ⭐⭐⭐ | Instant |
| Bisq P2P | ✓ | BTC/XMR | ⭐⭐ | Hours–days |
| Godex | ✓ | ✓ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | 5–40 min |
| Changelly | Partial (limits) | ✓ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | 5–30 min |
A non-KYC crypto exchange lets you swap or buy crypto without verifying your identity — no passport scan, no proof of address, no selfie. Most no-KYC services are instant swap platforms (you send coin A, you receive coin B, no account required) or peer-to-peer marketplaces. Centralized exchanges with full order books almost always require KYC because they hold custodial fiat. No-KYC means you keep custody, you skip the database.
The reliably no-KYC services in 2026 are Superswap.cx, SideShift, Bisq (peer-to-peer), Hodl Hodl, RoboSats and Trocador. Each has a different model: Superswap.cx and SideShift are instant swaps covering BTC, ETH, LTC, SOL plus Monero and Zcash; Bisq, Hodl Hodl and RoboSats are P2P Bitcoin marketplaces. ChangeNOW, SimpleSwap, Godex and StealthEX advertise no-KYC but reserve the right to request ID if a swap triggers their risk filter.
Safety on a no-KYC exchange depends on three things: how long the platform holds your coins, whether it has a public track record, and whether its smart contracts or hot wallets have been audited. Instant swaps are typically the safest model because funds only sit in custody for the few minutes a swap takes. Always start with a small test transaction on any new platform and verify URLs carefully — phishing clones target privacy users aggressively.
In most countries, yes. KYC requirements apply to the exchange operator, not the user — you are not breaking the law by using a service that doesn't ask for ID. Exceptions exist: some US states require ID for certain transaction sizes, and a handful of jurisdictions (mainly authoritarian regimes) restrict crypto outright. Tax obligations are separate and apply regardless of whether you completed KYC.
The IRS can see any blockchain wallet because Bitcoin, Ethereum and similar chains are public ledgers. They cannot directly link a wallet to your name without an on-ramp tying you to it — typically a KYC exchange deposit or withdrawal. Chain-analysis firms like Chainalysis sell tracing tools to the IRS. Monero and Zcash shielded transactions are designed to break this analysis. Tax obligations remain regardless of traceability.
No. Coinbase is a US-regulated exchange — you cannot deposit, trade or withdraw without completing identity verification. Even Coinbase Wallet (their non-custodial product) requires a verified Coinbase account if you want to fund it from the main exchange. If you specifically want to avoid KYC, you need a different category of platform entirely: instant swap services like Superswap.cx, or peer-to-peer markets like Bisq.
Yes — peer-to-peer is one of the cleanest no-KYC paths. Bisq, Hodl Hodl and RoboSats let you trade Bitcoin directly with another person using escrow, with no central account or ID. The trade-offs are slower execution, thinner liquidity than instant swaps, and the need to negotiate with a counterparty. P2P is legal in most jurisdictions including the US, but the IRS still expects you to report gains.
No account. No ID. No hassle. Enter your wallet address and swap.
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