Best No-KYC & Crypto Phone Number Services in 2026
The leading no-KYC, crypto-paid phone number services in 2026 are PrivacyNumber, Crypton.sh, Silent.link, JMP.chat and Google Voice — and they differ sharply on country coverage, whether you get real two-way calling, and whether the number is tied to your identity. PrivacyNumber (our own service) sells real, long-term local mobile and landline lines in 47 countries with full calls, SMS, voicemail and AI auto-pickup, no KYC, and crypto-only billing from a web panel. This page compares all five fairly so you can pick the right one for your privacy needs.
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What are the best no-KYC, crypto phone number services in 2026?
As of 2026, the five most relevant no-KYC or crypto-friendly phone number services are PrivacyNumber, Crypton.sh, Silent.link, JMP.chat and Google Voice. They are not interchangeable: they differ on how many countries they cover, whether the line does real two-way calling, what you pay with, and whether the number is tied to your identity.
Here is the short version of where each one fits:
- PrivacyNumber (our service) — real long-term local mobile and landline lines in 47 countries, full calls + SMS + voicemail + AI auto-pickup, no KYC, crypto-only, from a web panel.
- Crypton.sh — encrypted no-KYC number plus eSIM, open-source, Iceland-hosted, Monero-friendly. Operating in a degraded state in 2026.
- Silent.link — primarily an anonymous data eSIM; its phone number is an inbound-only add-on, US or UK only.
- JMP.chat — open-source real US/Canada number over XMPP, very cheap, technical setup.
- Google Voice — free, US-only, tied to your Google account; not a privacy tool.
The right pick depends on whether you need outbound calling, multiple countries, or a number that is genuinely unlinked from your identity. We break that down below.
How do these no-KYC phone number services compare side by side?
Across the core privacy features, PrivacyNumber and Crypton.sh are the only two that combine no KYC, crypto payment, and full two-way calling — but PrivacyNumber covers far more countries, adds landline lines and AI features, and is in stable operation, while Crypton.sh has been running in a degraded state through 2026. The table below summarizes the durable, verifiable differences as of 2026.
For deeper one-on-one breakdowns, see PrivacyNumber vs Crypton.sh, vs Silent.link, vs JMP.chat, and vs Google Voice.
How does PrivacyNumber differ from the others?
PrivacyNumber's durable advantage is breadth combined with depth: it is the only service here offering real long-term local numbers in 47 countries, in both mobile and landline formats, with full two-way calls, SMS/MMS, voicemail with transcription and translation, and optional AI features — all with no KYC and crypto-only billing, from a browser.
The practical contrasts:
- vs Silent.link: Silent.link's phone tier is inbound-only and limited to US (+1) or UK (+44); PrivacyNumber does outbound calls and SMS in 47 countries.
- vs JMP.chat: JMP is US/Canada-only and runs over XMPP/Jabber, which needs technical setup; PrivacyNumber works in any browser with no client to configure.
- vs Google Voice: Google Voice ties the number to your Google identity and takes no crypto; PrivacyNumber requires no ID and an email only as an optional login channel.
- vs Crypton.sh: similar no-KYC philosophy, but PrivacyNumber covers more countries, adds landline and AI auto-pickup, and is in stable operation.
Crucially, every PrivacyNumber line is a real number you keep — not a temporary, burner, OTP, or recycled VoIP line. Browse availability at /numbers/ or see /pricing/.
Which service should I choose for my situation?
Choose based on what you actually need to do with the number — outbound calling, country coverage, and identity separation are the deciding factors. Quick guidance:
- You want a real local number you keep, in calls + SMS + voicemail, paid in crypto, in many countries: PrivacyNumber. Pick a country at /numbers/ and activate at /get/.
- You only need anonymous mobile data across many countries and a number is secondary: Silent.link's eSIM is built for that, but expect inbound-only US/UK calling.
- You are technical, want open-source, and a cheap US/Canada line over XMPP is fine: JMP.chat.
- You want a maximally private, open-source, Monero-friendly setup and can tolerate inventory gaps: Crypton.sh, with the 2026 reliability caveat in mind.
- You just want a free US second number and privacy is not a hard requirement: Google Voice — but remember it is a privacy layer, not a cloak.
If you are weighing real long-term numbers against disposable ones, read long-term vs temporary numbers, and to pick a country, see best country for your number.
Are these numbers accepted everywhere, and what are the limits?
Most consumer apps and one-time-password (OTP) flows accept these lines, but no virtual provider — PrivacyNumber included — can bypass identity checks that go beyond SMS. Some VoIP-aware fintech apps (for example Venmo and CashApp) and some banks and government portals run additional verification that will reject any virtual or VoIP number.
What that means in practice:
- WhatsApp, Telegram, Signal, dating apps, and most sign-ups verify by SMS and generally work — see messaging and dating-app use cases.
- Google Voice is widely flagged as VoIP by other services, which can cause rejections; JMP requires receiving a text before you can send from a new account.
- With PrivacyNumber, if a freshly activated line is rejected, support swaps you to a different carrier range free within 7 days, and the refund policy gives a 7-day window for unused service, paid back in the same crypto.
For background on why some apps flag virtual lines, see VoIP vs non-VoIP numbers.
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PrivacyNumber vs Crypton.sh
PrivacyNumber vs Crypton.sh in 2026: 47-country real local mobile + landline lines, full two-way calls, AI auto-pickup and crypto-only no-KYC billing, compared fairly.
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PrivacyNumber vs Silent.link
PrivacyNumber vs Silent.link compared (2026): real two-way phone numbers in 47 countries vs an anonymous data-only eSIM with an inbound-only US/UK number add-on.
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PrivacyNumber vs JMP.chat: Real Numbers, Compared
PrivacyNumber vs JMP.chat (2026): both are real numbers with calls and SMS, but JMP is US/Canada-only over XMPP. Compare countries, features, setup and crypto billing.
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PrivacyNumber vs Google Voice
PrivacyNumber vs Google Voice in 2026: a no-KYC, crypto-only alternative with real local numbers in 47 countries — no Google account, no US phone required.
Frequently asked questions
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Which no-KYC phone number service covers the most countries?
PrivacyNumber covers the most, with real long-term local numbers in 47 countries across Europe, North and South America, Asia-Pacific, and the Middle East/Africa. Crypton.sh has a smaller list; Silent.link's phone tier is US or UK only; JMP.chat is US/Canada only; and Google Voice is US-only. If multi-country coverage matters, PrivacyNumber is the broadest option in this comparison.
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Can I pay for any of these with Monero or Bitcoin?
Yes, for most of them. PrivacyNumber accepts 30+ coins at checkout and settles everything to Monero on its side. Crypton.sh is Monero-friendly, Silent.link takes BTC, Lightning, Monero and USDT, and JMP.chat accepts Monero, Bitcoin and fiat. Google Voice is the exception — it takes no crypto and ties the number to your Google account. See /pay-with-monero/ or /pay-with-bitcoin/.
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Do all of these let me make outbound calls?
No. Only PrivacyNumber, Crypton.sh and JMP.chat support outbound calling. Silent.link's phone add-on is inbound-only, so you can receive calls and texts on a US or UK number but not place them. PrivacyNumber includes inbound calls in the subscription and charges outbound at per-minute rates on top, across all 47 countries it serves.
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Is Google Voice a good privacy choice?
Not really. Google Voice is free but US-only, requires a Google account plus an existing US phone to verify, and ties the number to your Google identity. It is widely flagged as VoIP by other services and is best described as a privacy layer, not a cloak. It accepts no crypto. For genuine identity separation, a no-KYC crypto service like PrivacyNumber is a better fit.
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Why is Crypton.sh listed if it is unreliable in 2026?
We include it because it is a genuine no-KYC, open-source, Monero-friendly option with a real following. Being fair means stating the current state honestly: as of 2026 Crypton.sh has been operating in a degraded state after a 2025 server seizure, with intermittent 'no numbers available' inventory and a relaunch in progress. If reliability is critical, factor that in. See /compare/privacynumber-vs-crypton-sh/.
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Do any of these require an app to install?
PrivacyNumber is web-panel only — it runs in any browser on any device, with no iOS/Android app, no eSIM and no physical SIM. Silent.link and Crypton.sh rely on an eSIM, JMP.chat runs over XMPP/Jabber clients that need technical setup, and Google Voice has apps and a web client tied to your Google account. If you want zero installation, PrivacyNumber's panel-only approach is the simplest.
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Are these real long-term numbers or temporary burner numbers?
It depends on the service. PrivacyNumber, JMP.chat and Google Voice issue real numbers you keep for as long as you pay. PrivacyNumber lines are allocated inside each country's national numbering plan — a French line is +33 6/7, a US line has a real area code — and are not recycled VoIP gateways. None of these five are temporary or disposable OTP numbers; for that distinction read /guides/long-term-vs-temporary-numbers/.
A real number you own.
No ID. Pay in crypto.
Real local mobile or landline lines in 47 countries — calls, SMS, voicemail and AI auto-pickup, live in 60 seconds. No identity required.