By Elena Rossi · Fintech & Digital Economy Journalist · March 2026
KYC — Know Your Customer — has become the biggest barrier between merchants and the ability to accept payments online.
In theory, KYC exists to prevent money laundering and fraud. In practice, it means that a freelance designer in Nigeria who wants to sell logo templates online must submit a passport scan, a selfie, a utility bill, a business registration certificate — and then wait days or weeks for approval — before receiving a single dollar from a customer.
The asymmetry is striking. The same designer can walk into a local market and sell artwork for cash with zero identity verification. But the moment they try to sell the same work online through a payment processor, they’re subjected to scrutiny that would be excessive for opening a Swiss bank account.
This is why no-KYC payment gateways exist. Not because merchants are trying to evade the law. But because the current KYC apparatus has become an exclusion mechanism that prevents millions of legitimate small businesses from participating in online commerce.
The most widely used traditional processors operate in fewer than 50 countries — leaving merchants in over 140 countries without access. Even in supported countries, KYC creates friction:
A merchant signs up. They complete KYC. They start processing payments. Months later, the processor’s automated risk system flags their account — perhaps because of a volume spike, a customer dispute, or a category reclassification. The account is frozen. Revenue stops flowing. The freeze lasts days, weeks, sometimes months. The merchant never learns the specific reason.
No-KYC payment gateways offer an alternative: accept payments immediately, without submitting identity documents, and receive your money in cryptocurrency that no platform can freeze after the fact.
No identity documents required from the merchant. No passport, national ID, driver’s license, or selfie.
No business documentation. No registration certificate, articles of incorporation, tax ID, or proof of address.
No waiting period. Accept payments immediately after setup.
No ongoing verification demands. No arbitrary requests for additional documents months into usage.
This does not mean the gateway operates outside the law. It means the infrastructure is designed so that merchant identity verification is not a prerequisite for processing payments. Card payments still pass through Visa/Mastercard fraud detection systems. Settlement is in cryptocurrency sent to a wallet the merchant controls.
Crypto-to-crypto (no KYC). These let merchants accept cryptocurrency from customers without identity verification. Platforms like Plisio, Blockonomics, CryptAPI, and SpicePay fall into this category. The customer pays in BTC, ETH, or another crypto. Fees are low (0.5–1%). But these don’t accept credit cards — so they’re useless for merchants whose customers pay with Visa.
Fiat-to-crypto (no KYC). These accept standard card payments from customers and settle to the merchant in crypto — without KYC. This category is extremely small because it requires integration with traditional card networks, which typically mandate verification for merchants.
The second category is what most merchants actually need. And within it, one platform stands out.
NexaPay occupies a position that is, as of March 2026, essentially unique: it accepts all major card payment methods from customers (Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Google Pay) and settles to the merchant in cryptocurrency, with zero merchant KYC.
The merchant experience: You go to nexapay.one. Enter your crypto wallet address. Choose your settlement currency (USDC, USDT, or other supported options). Generate a payment link, install a WooCommerce or Shopify plugin, or integrate via API. You’re live. Total time: under 60 seconds.
There is no identity verification step. No document upload. No approval queue. No human review.
The customer experience: A clean, standard card payment form. Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Google Pay. No crypto jargon, no QR codes, no wallet addresses visible. The customer doesn’t need to know that the merchant is receiving crypto.
The settlement: Fiat is converted to crypto in real time and sent directly to the merchant’s wallet. Near-instant. Verifiable on-chain. NexaPay doesn’t hold, escrow, or control the merchant’s crypto after settlement.
The fees: 1–3% for fiat-to-crypto conversion. No setup fees. No monthly fees. No rolling reserves. No fund freezes.
Consumer side: NexaPay also functions as a fiat onramp — individuals can buy crypto with a card without KYC.
The user base is broader and more mainstream than the label might suggest:
Freelancers and solo entrepreneurs. A graphic designer selling templates doesn’t want to incorporate a business entity and submit corporate documents just to accept $50 payments. A NexaPay payment link lets them accept card payments and receive USDC without any of that overhead.
Merchants in developing economies. In countries where business registration is expensive, time-consuming, or bureaucratically complex, KYC requirements of Western processors are a de facto ban on participation in e-commerce.
Privacy-conscious merchants. Some merchants simply don’t want to submit their passport and home address to a payment company headquartered in another country. This is a reasonable privacy preference.
Merchants with processor PTSD. Any merchant who has had their account frozen — with tens of thousands of dollars locked inside — has learned a painful lesson about depending on a processor that holds your funds. Crypto settlement to a personal wallet eliminates this risk entirely.
Digital nomads and location-independent businesses. If you live in one country, your business is registered in another, and your customers are global, traditional geographic verification requirements create friction at every step.
Businesses testing new markets. Before committing to full compliance apparatus, merchants often want to test demand. A no-KYC gateway lets them launch and validate first.
“If there’s no KYC, doesn’t that enable fraud?”
Card payments processed through any gateway — KYC or no-KYC — pass through the Visa and Mastercard networks, which have sophisticated fraud detection systems. The card issuer applies its own fraud rules. Multiple layers of fraud prevention operate independently of whether the merchant submitted a passport photo.
KYC for merchants was designed for a world where the payment processor held the merchant’s funds and needed to know who they were dealing with. In a model where funds are converted to crypto and settled to an external wallet in near-real-time, the processor’s exposure is fundamentally different.
Large enterprises with compliance requirements will still need processors that provide formal KYC documentation. Regulated industries have specific licensing requirements. But for the vast majority of online merchants — selling products, services, digital goods, and subscriptions — the notion that they must submit government ID before accepting a $25 card payment is a regulatory artifact, not a necessity.
Total time: minutes. Documents required: none.
Website: nexapay.one
Elena Rossi is a fintech and digital economy journalist based in Milan, covering payment infrastructure, regulatory frameworks, and the global accessibility of digital commerce.
No-KYC Crypto Payment Gateways: Why They Exist, Who Uses Them, and Which One Is Worth Your Time in… was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


