HushVPS is privacy infrastructure. We rent virtual servers to people who cannot afford to be linked to them — and we designed the whole operation so that, most of the time, we could not identify you even if we were asked to. "You don't exist. We don't ask."
Most hosting companies treat anonymity as suspicious. They demand a passport scan to spin up a $5 box, keep a permanent record of every packet, and sell the metadata on the side. That model quietly assumes the worst about everyone who values privacy — and it fails precisely the people who need protection most: journalists working with sources, activists under hostile governments, researchers, whistleblowers, abuse survivors rebuilding a life, and ordinary people who simply do not accept that using a computer should require surrendering an identity.
HushVPS starts from the opposite assumption. The safest data is the data that was never collected. So we practise real data minimisation: we do not ask who you are, we do not build a profile, and we do not retain the request logs, access logs, or traffic records that would let anyone reconstruct what you did on your server. When there is nothing on file, there is nothing to leak, nothing to sell, and very little to hand over. That is not a slogan bolted onto a normal host — it is the entire reason the company exists.
Privacy is not the same as impunity, and we are careful about the difference. HushVPS is an offshore-legal, data-minimising provider — not a place where anything goes. We protect the anonymity of legitimate users while drawing a hard line at genuine harm, and we think those two commitments reinforce each other rather than conflict.
Plenty of hosts say "privacy." Fewer change their architecture to mean it. Here is what that looks like in practice.
You create a quick pseudonymous account — a username and password, email optional — with no legal name, no ID, and no KYC on file. You order a server, get an order token to track it, and manage it — no personal dossier is ever created to be breached or subpoenaed.
We bill in Monero because a named card ties a server to a legal identity by design. XMR settles privately, so the payment trail does not become an identity trail. See how it works on the features page.
We write down exactly what we keep to run the service and what we deliberately do not — then hold ourselves to it publicly on the transparency report. No secret retention hidden behind a marketing claim.
Some legal orders come with a gag that forbids us from telling you. A warrant canary is how we signal what we are forbidden to state outright — a standing declaration that speaks by falling silent.
We are the operator, not a reseller layering a brand over someone else's control panel. The privacy properties on this site are ones we can actually enforce, because the machines and the configuration are ours to hold to that standard.
We comply with lawful, properly served orders from a competent court in our hosting jurisdiction — and we push back on anything overbroad, improper, or fishing for data we never collected. An email with no legal weight gets a polite no.
Anonymity is for protection, not predation. CSAM, malware, spam, and network attacks are off the platform — no exceptions, no negotiation. Our acceptable use policy spells out the hard lines that keep this a place worth defending.
Being honest also means not inventing a story. We are not going to fabricate a founding date, a heroic origin, staff headshots, or client counts to seem more established. The team behind HushVPS keeps its identity and operating location private rather than publish details it cannot stand behind. Anything we cannot state truthfully, we leave blank rather than make up.
If you need a server and you need to stay unlinked to it, that is exactly the person HushVPS was built for. Pick a plan, pay in Monero, and start in minutes — or ask us anything first.