Privacy: as close to anonymous as hosting gets
BTCServers leads with the strongest card in its deck: no KYC, no ID, and even email is optional. That combination puts it at the sharp end of the offshore hosting spectrum — plenty of "privacy" hosts still quietly require an email and a name, while here the account footprint can shrink to essentially nothing. Payment support for Bitcoin, Monero and 50+ other coins completes the picture, and the presence of Monero matters more than the headline coin count: it is the difference between pseudonymous payment and genuinely private payment. Our privacy score of 88/100 reflects that this sits near the practical ceiling for a hosting provider — what remains is the residual metadata any host inevitably sees, such as connection patterns and workloads, which no signup policy can erase.
Custody and transparency: the usual offshore trade-off
As with nearly all crypto-only hosts, you prepay in coins with no chargeback path. Custody scores a middling 6/10 not because we have seen funds mishandled, but because the structure leaves users no recourse beyond the operator's goodwill if a billing dispute arises. Transparency lands at the same level: the service is deliberately opaque about itself, which is an understandable posture for an offshore operator but one that shifts risk onto the customer. You are trusting an entity you cannot fully identify, operating from a jurisdiction you may not be able to independently verify.
Operations and track record
Operationally, this is a polished offering: deployment in 60 seconds, plans from $3.99/mo, and DDoS protection included rather than sold as an upsell — the kind of detail usually associated with a serious operation. The 8/10 operational score also reflects breadth: VPS, dedicated, GPU and RDP under one roof is more range than most no-KYC hosts manage, covering everything from a cheap privacy box to heavier compute. Track record is the soft spot at 5/10 — nothing damning on file, but not the deep, independently verifiable history that would justify a higher grade. Until that accumulates, sensible practice applies: keep prepaid balances modest and keep your backups off-platform.
A B (7.4/10): near-best-in-class signup privacy and strong day-to-day operations, held back by a middling transparency posture and a track record that hasn't yet earned the benefit of every doubt.

