Privacy: no ID, no problem
VPSCrypto's signup asks for what it needs to provision a server and nothing more. No KYC, no ID, and payment in Monero — the strongest option here, since XMR leaves no on-chain trail tying you to your infrastructure — or Bitcoin if you prefer. That is exactly the right default for a service marketing itself as anonymous, and it earns VPSCrypto its standout privacy score. The usual caveat applies to any offshore host: an anonymous account only stays anonymous if you connect through a VPN or Tor and avoid reusing identifying details, because every provider necessarily sees traffic metadata at the hypervisor level.
Custody, transparency, and track record
Hosting is prepaid by nature, so custody exposure is limited to whatever service time you have paid for up front. You are not parking large sums, but crypto payments are effectively final, so the sensible approach is to start with a short term and scale up once the service proves itself. Transparency is middling: like most operators in this niche, the people behind VPSCrypto say little about who they are or how the business is structured, and "offshore" is doing a lot of unexamined work in the marketing. Track record is the weakest pillar. Nothing damning surfaced in our research, but there is not yet a long, well-documented public history to lean on — and in a market where anonymous hosts can appear and vanish, longevity is the evidence that matters most.
Operations: fast, clean, and cheap
The technical offer is genuinely good. All-NVMe KVM slices, clean IPs — a real differentiator, since many crypto-friendly hosts sit on blacklisted ranges — DDoS protection included, and root access in about 60 seconds from payment. Eight locations give reasonable geographic spread, and the $3.50/mo entry price undercuts much of the no-KYC field. For throwaway boxes, self-hosted privacy tooling, or infrastructure you would rather not attach your name to, the operational package is hard to fault at this price.
A B reflects the split: near-top-tier privacy and strong day-to-day operations, dragged down by an opaque operator and a short public history. If VPSCrypto keeps delivering, an upgrade is plausible; today, 7.5/10 is fair.

