I'm always put off by the idea of P2P - been in the space since 2010, see lots of dangers from involving in (criminal/physical).
You just can't verify where the funds come from and even though that's the job of the financial institution in the middle, they are sometimes overly lapse, and you could end up being indicted over a transaction going through the financial system 10 yrs ago when you offloaded some BTC.
There are online services (money exchanges) who are legaly allowed to exchange up to 10k euro without KYC.
However they normaly charge a fee between 3-5%
It is not a no-kyc option even if that is stated. It is just a kyc-hidden limit.
They will "just" use and store the banking info you provide them and use these for kyc instead of having to collect the same info again on their side on their own.
It is not a no-kyc option, could not be further away from that.
I recently bought a 10 $ domain with my visa and the company requested verification. I was like what? I do not trust you with my info so they refunded me. This was new....
and localcryptos.com is closing down
I recently bought a 10 $ domain with my visa and the company requested verification. I was like what? I do not trust you with my info so they refunded me. This was new....
and localcryptos.com is closing down
- No KYC
- P2P
- Built-in escrow
- Bitcoin and Monero support
- Account wipe feature
- Decent global coverage
- Doesn't require an email address or phone number to use it
- Optional Google Authenticator/Authy/TOTP support
- Has optional Tor and I2P support (if you want to hide your IP)
careful. This is not NO kyc, they perform all kind of checks on you without you knowing. Its more likely to be called kyc-less (since you dont need to provide your own info).
But they collect and complie your profile based on your name/transactions/bank account provided.
you can use kraken, it doesnt make much of a difference. Both are regulated providers.
If you look for no kyc things, p2p is the direction (with its own problems).