NymVPN's new 'Pay as You Go' option ditches accounts and subscriptions for true anonymity

NymVPN ap on mobile – promo image
(Image credit: Nym Technologies)

  • NymVPN removes the need for accounts, subscriptions, or identity details
  • Access is granted through anonymous zk-nym credentials
  • A minimum payment of 225 $NYM unlocks roughly 25GB of usage

NymVPN has rolled out a new way to access its network that strips away almost everything you'd normally hand over to a modern service provider.

With the freshly launched "Pay as You Go" service, there's no account to register, no recurring subscription, and no identity details to share. Instead of the usual sign-up flow, users deposit $NYM tokens into a smart contract and receive anonymous cryptographic credentials called zk-nyms in return.

These credentials authenticate your access to the network without ever linking back to your wallet, payment, or any personal data, which is a fundamentally different approach compared to even the best VPN services on the market.

What the "Pay as You Go" service changes

The headline change is that the Nym network is now directly accessible through decentralized $NYM token payments.

Paying with $NYM tokens directly would normally expose your wallet address and on-chain transaction history. NymVPN's solution is to convert that payment into a zk-nym credential issued by a decentralized set of validators running the Nym API.

These credentials can be reused and re-randomized, and crucially, they are unlinkable to the original payment data.

In practice, this means the network has no way of knowing who you are, what you paid, or when you paid it when you connect. There is no email address tied to a subscription, no billing profile, and no central command point that could later be compelled to hand over user records.

Most VPNs ask for at least an email address and payment method, which creates a paper trail even if the provider promises not to log your activity. NymVPN's approach removes the trail entirely at the credential layer.

The service genuinely cannot tie usage to a specific person, even if it wanted to. That's a stronger guarantee than a traditional no-logs policy, which still relies on trusting the provider.

How to use Pay as You Go

For now, the Pay as You Go service is aimed at more technically inclined users. Access runs through the NymVPN command-line client (nym-vpnc) rather than a polished graphical app, so you'll need to be comfortable typing commands into a terminal.

You'll also need to set up and maintain your own cryptocurrency wallet, fund it with $NYM tokens, and use that wallet to deposit tokens into a smart contract in exchange for the anonymous credentials that grant network access. The minimum buy-in is 225 $NYM, which translates to roughly 25GB of usage.

Graph on how NymVPN's Pay as You Go system works

(Image credit: NymVPN)

Mullvad VPN has long been the benchmark for anonymous VPN payments. It accepts cash, Monero, Bitcoin, and Bitcoin Cash, and recently expanded its crypto options to make Monero payments easier for privacy-conscious users. Mullvad also famously uses randomly generated account numbers rather than email-based sign-ups, and it has positioned itself around a strict no-logging policy.

However, Mullvad still operates on a flat €5 per month subscription model and requires an account number to track usage, even if that number isn't tied to your identity. NymVPN's Pay as You Go goes a step further by eliminating the account concept entirely and replacing it with cryptographic credentials issued on a decentralized network.

For users who want pay-as-you-use billing without any persistent identifier, NymVPN's new service represents one of the most aggressive moves yet toward truly anonymous VPN access.


Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!


Monica J. White
Contributing Writer

Monica is a tech journalist with over a decade of experience. She writes about the latest developments in computing, which means anything from computer chips made out of paper to cutting-edge desktop processors.

GPUs are her main area of interest, and nothing thrills her quite like that time every couple of years when new graphics cards hit the market.

She built her first PC nearly 20 years ago, and dozens of builds later, she’s always planning out her next build (or helping her friends with theirs). During her career, Monica has written for many tech-centric outlets, including Digital Trends, SlashGear, WePC, and Tom’s Hardware.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.