What KYC is, and why hosts run it
KYC ("Know Your Customer") is the regulatory regime that requires financial institutions to verify the identity of their customers. It exists for banking, securities, and money services — not for generic web hosting. Hosts that run KYC do so for one of three reasons: they accept fiat (which subjects their payment processor to KYC), they want to weed out abuse cheaply, or they're built on top of a mainstream cloud that runs KYC upstream.
uNode is none of these. We don't accept fiat. We handle abuse with operational measures, not identity verification. And we run our own infrastructure rather than reselling mainstream cloud capacity. So there's no upstream KYC to leak through, and no regulatory reason for us to collect ID.
What uNode never asks for
At any tier, at any time, in any flow:
- Government ID, passport, or driver's license
- Selfie or video verification
- Real name or legal name
- Home or billing address
- Phone number (Telegram handles auth)
- Email address
- Credit card or bank details
- Proof of address or utility bills
- Source of funds documentation
- Tax identifier (SSN, EIN, VAT, etc.)
The only thing we receive is what Telegram passes during sign-in: your Telegram user ID, optional first name, optional username. That's it.
How "no-KYC" hosts quietly leak
Most hosts that advertise "no KYC" still ask for verification somewhere in the lifecycle. The four most common patterns — and how uNode avoids each:
KYC at upgrade
Some hosts let you sign up anonymously but require ID verification when you upgrade past a certain price tier or payment volume. uNode does not — Titan ($114.99/mo) has the same identity surface as Starter ($5.49/mo).
KYC via payment processor
Many crypto-accepting hosts route payments through a third-party processor that runs its own KYC at higher amounts. uNode handles crypto payments through providers that don't require this for our typical transaction sizes — and we never pass user data through.
KYC via fiat fallback
Hosts that accept both crypto and credit cards inevitably require KYC for the card customers, and the data systems often bleed across. uNode is crypto-only, full stop.
Hidden fingerprinting
Some 'anonymous' hosts run device fingerprinting, collect detailed analytics, or sync account data with sister companies. We don't run any of this, and our privacy policy says so explicitly.
The signup flow, end to end
- 1
Open the dashboard
Visit console.unode.net. You'll see a single 'Sign in with Telegram' button.
- 2
Tap once in Telegram
Telegram opens, asks if you want to share your username with the site, and that's it. We receive your Telegram user ID and (optionally) your username and first name.
- 3
Top up with crypto
Pick BTC, ETH, LTC, USDT, SOL, TRX or any of the 90+ supported assets. Send the amount shown to the deposit address. Confirmation typically lands in 10-30 minutes.
- 4
Deploy a server
Pick a plan, choose your OS, click deploy. The IP and root password appear in the dashboard within a minute. No verification step. No 'pending review' delay. No support ticket.
Frequently asked
What is no-KYC VPS hosting?
Virtual server hosting that doesn't require identity verification — no government ID, no selfie, no real name, no proof of address. Payment is made with cryptocurrency, and signup uses pseudonymous identity such as a Telegram account.
Why does uNode not require KYC?
Hosting providers in the US are not required to KYC customers — that obligation falls on regulated financial institutions. Because uNode is crypto-only, we don't handle the kind of fiat payment rails that would put us in scope for KYC regulation. We choose not to collect identity data we don't need.
Will uNode ever ask for ID later, after I sign up?
No. There is no upgrade tier, payment volume, or usage threshold that triggers identity verification. The same identity surface applies to Starter ($5.49/mo) and Titan ($114.99/mo).
Is no-KYC VPS hosting legal?
Yes, in the United States and most jurisdictions. KYC obligations apply to financial institutions, not generic web hosting. You are responsible for whatever you run on the server, regardless of how anonymously you signed up.
Are there other no-KYC VPS hosts worth considering?
Yes — FlokiNET, Privex, and Njalla all advertise no-KYC. We have honest comparisons of each on the compare pages, including where they win and where uNode wins. Hardware and pricing differ significantly between them.