Choosing a Swap Service Safely
How to pick a trustworthy no-KYC swap, use aggregators and the Monerica directory, and spot fakes and surprise-KYC traps.
Not all swap services are equal. A good one trades fairly, keeps minimal logs, and returns your coin if something fails. A bad one gives lousy rates, hassles you for ID after you've already sent funds, or is an outright scam clone. This lesson teaches you to tell them apart.
What a Trustworthy Swap Looks Like
- Genuinely no-KYC — no account, no ID, and crucially no surprise verification after you deposit (see the trap below).
- Clear refund policy and a refund-address field — your coin comes back if the swap can't complete.
- Minimal logging, ideally a stated no-logs policy, and a working Tor onion address.
- A track record — it's been around, has real user reports, and reliable support with a swap ID system.
- Honest rates — a reasonable spread, not a suspiciously good one used as bait.
Use Aggregators and Directories
You don't have to find these one by one. Two kinds of tools help:
- Swap aggregators compare many no-KYC services at once and route your trade to the best rate — for example Trocador, which is listed in the Monerica directory. SwapRaven likewise compares no-KYC instant-swap services side by side.
- Directories like Monerica catalogue Monero-accepting exchanges and swap services that the community vets — a good place to find reputable options (and to avoid ones flagged as problematic).
Cross-referencing a service against a curated directory is one of the simplest ways to avoid a bad actor.
The "Surprise KYC" Trap
The nastiest pattern in this space: a service advertises "no-KYC," takes your deposit, then holds your funds and demands ID ("enhanced verification") before releasing them. To protect yourself:
- Prefer services and aggregators with a stated policy and a reputation for not doing this. Trocador, for instance, exposes each provider's KYC/AML rating so you can pick low-risk ones.
- Test small. A tiny first swap reveals this behavior before a large amount is at stake.
- Understand that the coin you send in can matter — funds an exchange considers "flagged" are more likely to trigger a hold. Swapping from clean, self-custodied coins reduces this.
Spotting Fakes and Scams
- Phishing clones. Scammers copy popular swap sites at look-alike domains. Reach services through the official link (a directory, a bookmark, or the project's verified onion), not a random search ad.
- Too-good rates. A rate far better than everyone else is bait. Compare a couple of services first.
- No refund address field, no support, no history. Walk away.
Privacy Habits Regardless of Service
- Connect over Tor so no service ties the swap to your IP.
- Use a fresh refund address and your own Monero address — never an exchange deposit address.
- For the strongest, no-custodian option of all, consider an atomic swap, where no service ever holds your coins.
Pick a vetted service, verify it through a directory, test small, and you'll avoid almost every problem. Next, get the best deal and dodge the money-losing traps in Rates, Fees & Pitfalls.
Comments
Log in or create a free account to comment.
No comments yet — be the first.