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.
Solid pick. Verified working but with a meaningful caveat (UX rough, smaller market, intermediate trust step, partial coverage). Listed because the trade-off is sometimes worth it.
Full rubric + 7-step verification walkthrough at /methodology.
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).
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.
Sourced from operator pages — verify identity via more than one channel before trusting time-sensitive instructions.
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Silence censorship. Protect your privacy and bypass restrictions with Xeovo VPN. No email required.
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