# nadanada.me

Category: sims · eSIM + phone + VPN bundle
Grade: B
Highlights: ESIM, SMS-VERIFICATION, VPN, NO-KYC, NO-ACCOUNT, XMR
Web: https://nadanada.me
Contact: X: https://x.com/nadanada_me
Last verified: 2026-07-01
Also listed at: KYCnot.me, Monerica

> Three-service bundle at unusually low prices: no-KYC eSIM ($0.99/plan), disposable phone numbers for SMS verification ($1.50/number), and a no-log VPN ($3/mo). No account, no email, anonymous payments including XMR.

## Review

**What it is.** A privacy-utility bundle from a single operator: **eSIM data plans**, **disposable phone numbers** for SMS verification, and a **VPN**. All three are no-account, no-KYC, anonymously payable including in Monero. The three services live under the same brand and appear to be operated by the same team.

**Pricing (from the homepage table).**

- **VPN** — $3/mo, multi-country exits, no activity logging, daily-to-yearly plans, no account.
- **eSIM** — $0.99/plan (top-up-anytime), global connectivity, no KYC, instant activation.
- **Phone numbers** — $1.50/number, disposable, many countries, many services supported, Bitcoin payments, no number collisions.

All three sit at the low end of their respective markets. The homepage is unusually direct about pricing — no signup wall between the reader and the fee table.

**Peer position.** kycnot.me lists the service at **8/10** and monerica has a corroborating listing. Two independent peer-directory anchors — the same set we normally require for a B on this side of the directory.

**Why Grade B (not C).** The three data points that pull this off the default C for new SIMs-category listings: (a) two independent peer directories both list it, kycnot at 8/10, (b) pricing is disclosed on the homepage without a signup gate, and (c) the operator engaged xmr.club directly on X (2026-06-30), asked how to get listed, was pointed at `/submit`, and filed the submission the same day — a small signal but a positive one for follow-through discipline. Grade A withheld pending observation of a clean release cycle on our side plus a cross-read of the disposable-numbers pool (a category with a known abuse-and-freeze tail).

**Trust story.** Numbers-as-a-service (SMS verification) is the highest-friction sub-service in this bundle — pools of numbers get burned, some upstream carriers refuse recycled numbers, and the anti-fraud posture of the destination platforms varies. The $1.50 price point implies pools rotate fast, which is fine for one-off verifications but readers who need a durable inbound-SMS destination should treat this as pool-tier, not personal-tier. The VPN and eSIM are simpler: pay, activate, use.

**What we don't know yet.** Jurisdiction and operator identity are not surfaced on the homepage. Uptime history hasn't been observed by xmr.club yet. Path to A: named legal entity or verifiable operator, six months of observed operation without pool-collision or SMS-freeze reports, and independent monero-community discussion (monero.town, Reddit) confirming the service works as advertised for XMR-paid checkouts.

**Known incident.** One X report on 2026-06-29 (`@nittanycrypto`) — customer purchased an eSIM that never activated, and a chatbot refund request went unanswered for >2 weeks. Single report, not a pattern, but a live customer-service data point. Path to A now explicitly includes: refund-loop resolution surfaced by operator + zero follow-up activation reports over the next 90 days.

Source: https://xmr.club/sims/nadanada