An IncogNET alternative
IncogNET does privacy hosting properly — email-only signup, XMR, EPYC NVMe with memory encryption. The structural difference is the map: three of its four locations are in the United States.
Updated 2026-06-12

IncogNET is one of the field’s good citizens: honest no-KYC signup, in-house Monero acceptance, modern AMD EPYC hardware with SME/SEV memory encryption enabled, and a community reputation it has earned. For US-based users who want privacy-respecting hosting at home — domestic latency with an email-only account — it is arguably the category leader, and our verified table treats it accordingly.
The alternative case turns on one structural fact: footprint. Three of IncogNET’s four locations are American, with Amsterdam the single EU outpost (frequently out of stock, as kycnot.me listings note). US jurisdiction means US legal process — DMCA takedowns very much included — which sits awkwardly under a privacy-first banner for anyone whose concern is distance from that process. VPSCrypto inverts the geography: all eight regions are offshore picks chosen for legal posture, from EU value hubs through non-Eyes Switzerland to APAC, with DMCA-ignored process uniform across them. Entry pricing runs less than half of IncogNET’s for a comparable NVMe tier — verified below — with unlimited traffic and a dedicated clean IPv4 everywhere.
How the options compare
| Host | Plan | Price | Monero | No-KYC | Storage | Locations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VPSCrypto this site1 | Pup — 1 vCPU / 1 GB / 25 GB NVMe / unlimited | $3.50/mo | Yes — first-class | No-KYC (email only) | All-NVMe | 8 (NL, FR, RO, BG, SE, IS, CH, MY) |
| IncogNET2 | 1 vCPU / 1 GB / 20 GB NVMe / 6 TB / 1.5 Gbps | $8/mo | Yes | No-KYC (email only) | NVMe (EPYC, SME/SEV) | US ×3, Amsterdam |
| Privex3 | DE V1 — 2 cores / 1 GB / 50 GB HDD / 2 TB | $8/mo | Yes | Rare KYC (name + email) | HDD (SSD optional) | 2 (DE, SE) |
| CryptoHost4 | Configurator — from 1 vCPU / 1 GB / 7 GB NVMe | €3.62/mo +21% VAT (~€4.38) | Yes — first-class | No-KYC for crypto | All-NVMe | 1 (Bucharest, RO) |
- VPSCrypto: Launched May 2026 — newest here, so no long track record yet.
- IncogNET: US-heavy footprint (only one EU POP); frequently out of stock.
- Privex: Default tiers ship HDD, not NVMe; only two locations.
- CryptoHost: Single location only; Romanian 21% VAT added on top of the headline price.
Where IncogNET genuinely wins
Hardware transparency and US latency. SME/SEV memory encryption on by default is a real, uncommon protection against cross-tenant memory attacks, and EPYC NVMe nodes are quality kit. If your users are American and your threat model does not include US legal process itself, IncogNET’s domestic POPs beat any offshore host’s ~80–100 ms transatlantic round trip. Their team’s standing in the privacy community is also simply good.
Where the alternative case is strongest
Jurisdictional surface: if avoiding US process is the point of going private, hosting in the US contradicts it; our footprint keeps every byte outside that reach with court-order-only handling in each server’s own country. Choice within the footprint: eight regions spanning free-press (IS), non-Eyes (CH), value (RO/BG) and APAC (MY) postures versus one EU door. Price and availability: entry at $3.50 vs $8, and our regions don’t run the chronic out-of-stock cycles that IncogNET’s Amsterdam node is known for. Traffic: unlimited at 1 Gbps versus metered allotments.
A note on memory encryption
Fair is fair: we do not currently advertise SME/SEV guest memory encryption, and IncogNET does. For most privacy workloads the dominant risks live elsewhere (account identity, payment trail, jurisdiction, application security), and KVM isolation plus in-guest disk encryption covers the practical surface — but if hypervisor-level memory attacks are explicitly in your model, weigh their hardware story seriously. Honest comparisons cut both ways.
Frequently asked questions
Is IncogNET a bad privacy host?
No — it is one of the better ones, and our table says so. The comparison is structural: a mostly-US footprint under US process versus an entirely offshore one under court-order-only process. Which is “better” depends on whether US jurisdiction is your latency home or your threat model.
Why does the US footprint matter if signup is no-KYC?
Because no-KYC governs what the host knows; jurisdiction governs what the state can compel. A US server answers to subpoenas and DMCA regardless of how anonymous the account is. The two layers protect different things — stack them deliberately.
How do prices actually compare?
Verified in the dated table above, from each provider’s own pages: their NVMe entry at $8 with metered traffic against our $3.50 with unlimited; the gap holds upward through the tiers.
Who should stay with IncogNET?
US-audience projects that want domestic latency from a privacy-respecting host, and anyone whose threat model specifically prizes SME/SEV memory encryption over jurisdictional distance.
Keep exploring.
Deploy an offshore VPS in about a minute
No-KYC, crypto-paid, all-NVMe. Pick a tier, pay in Monero or any major coin, and get root in roughly 60 seconds.
