A no-KYC Bitcoin wallet is self-custodial software that never asks who you are — no account, no email, no ID. You hold the keys, the wallet just manages them. Here are the strongest options in 2026 across software, mobile and hardware, plus the privacy features that actually matter.
What makes a wallet "no-KYC"
- Self-custodial: you control the private keys and a recovery seed; no company can freeze or seize your funds.
- No account or identity: a real Bitcoin wallet never requires registration. If something wants your ID, it's a custodial service, not a wallet.
- Open-source: the code can be independently audited.
- Privacy controls: coin control, your-own-node support, and Tor routing keep your activity yours.
Remember Bitcoin is pseudonymous, not anonymous — the wallet you choose and how you use it largely determines your privacy.
Desktop wallets
Sparrow is a favourite among privacy-conscious users: full coin control, connect-to-your-own-node, Tor support and clear transaction details. Electrum is a long-running, lightweight, open-source standard with hardware-wallet support and server selection. Both are self-custodial with no KYC. Browse them in the wallets directory.
Mobile wallets
Look for open-source mobile wallets that support your own node and Tor, generate fresh receive addresses, and never ask for an account. Avoid "wallets" bundled inside KYC exchange apps — those are custodial. Compare options, scored for privacy, in the directory.
Hardware wallets (cold storage)
For meaningful amounts, a hardware wallet keeps keys offline and confirms transactions on a separate screen. Strong open-source-leaning choices include Coldcard, BitBox02, Blockstream Jade and Trezor — pair them with Sparrow or Electrum. Buy direct from the manufacturer (many accept crypto), never second-hand, and verify the device on setup. See the hardware options in the directory.
Privacy features that matter
- Run your own node so you don't leak your addresses to a third-party server — the single biggest privacy upgrade.
- Coin control lets you choose which coins to spend and avoid linking unrelated funds.
- Tor hides your IP from the network.
- CoinJoin can break the link between coins, but note the landscape narrowed in 2024 after the Samourai arrests and the end of the Wasabi coordinator; community coordinators continue. Use current, trusted tools and understand the trade-offs.
Get Bitcoin into your wallet without KYC
A private wallet pairs naturally with a private on-ramp: acquire BTC through no-KYC P2P or swaps, or receive it for goods and work. Then keep it in self-custody. For converting between Bitcoin and Monero with no account, see atomic swaps.
Seed safety
Your recovery seed is your money. Write it on paper or steel, store it offline, never type it into a website and never photograph it. Anyone with the seed can spend your coins; lose it with no backup and they're gone.
"A purely peer-to-peer version of electronic cash would allow online payments to be sent directly from one party to another without going through a financial institution." — Satoshi Nakamoto, 2008
FAQ
What is the best no-KYC Bitcoin wallet?
For desktop, Sparrow and Electrum lead on privacy and control; for cold storage, Coldcard, BitBox02, Jade and Trezor are strong. All are self-custodial with no KYC.
Do Bitcoin wallets require KYC?
No. Self-custodial wallets never require identity. Only custodial services (exchanges, some "wallet" apps) do.
Is using a no-KYC wallet legal?
Yes, self-custody is legal in most countries. You still owe applicable taxes; this is not legal advice.
Compare every wallet by privacy score and KYC level in the NoKYC wallets directory.