Anonymous Betting Anonymity Score Checker: Find Out How Private Your Setup Really Is
How private is your no-KYC betting setup, really? Answer 10 quick questions about your crypto, VPN, email, and account habits. Get a 0-100 anonymity score with personalised recommendations. 100% client-side — your answers never leave your browser.
Most bettors who think they are betting "anonymously" leak identifying information in at least two places they don't expect. The deposit trail on a public blockchain. The reuse of an email address already linked to a verified exchange account. A residential IP address seen by the gambling site on every login. Individually, these leaks feel small. Together, they build a profile that any blockchain analyst, payment-tracing firm, or compliance officer can stitch back to a real-world identity with surprisingly little effort.
The Anonymity Score Checker below measures practical privacy, not theoretical anonymity. It is calibrated against how real investigators, blockchain-analytics firms, and operator compliance teams actually de-anonymise gambling activity in 2026. That makes it more useful than a generic privacy quiz: a high score here means you would be hard to identify, not just hard to find on a list.
The tool runs entirely in your browser. No data is sent anywhere. You can disconnect from the internet and it still works. Take it once for a baseline, then again after making changes, and watch your score climb.
Your 10-Question Privacy Assessment
Your Personalised Recommendations
How to read your score
Scores are bucketed into five tiers. The tiers reflect what a reasonable investigator could do with the data you leak, not a theoretical maximum-anonymity ideal.
0–25: High Exposure
Your current setup leaks enough identifying information that a determined operator, regulator, or blockchain analyst could link your betting activity to your real-world identity with limited effort. The most common culprits at this level are: depositing directly from a KYC exchange wallet, using your real name in an account email, and connecting from a residential IP with no network privacy layer. The good news is that the next tier up is reachable in an afternoon, and the tier above that within a week.
26–50: Moderate Exposure
You have a meaningful privacy baseline, but a single serious leak in coin choice, wallet reuse, or account identity is undoing most of the work. The most common culprits here are using Bitcoin (pseudonymous, not anonymous) without coin mixing, or running a privacy coin wallet from an address that has touched a KYC exchange. Fix the highlighted weak spot and you will usually jump straight into the next tier.
51–75: Strong Baseline
You are doing most things right. A determined investigator would have to combine several partial signals to build a confident link, and the time and cost of doing so would discourage most routine compliance checks. The remaining gaps are usually operational — single-account email reuse, occasional VPN inconsistency, or one wallet that has touched both gambling and KYC sources.
76–90: Very Strong
You have implemented the practical privacy stack most analysts would not bother trying to break. Your coin choice, wallet hygiene, network layer, and account separation are all aligned. The remaining deductions usually come from edge cases (occasional VPN drops, a single wallet address that saw a KYC inflow years ago) rather than systemic gaps.
91–100: Near-Maximum (for practical purposes)
You have done everything that is reasonable outside of specialist threat models (journalism, activism in hostile regimes, criminal adversaries). At this point, the only ways to de-anonymise your activity would be traffic-correlation attacks, device-level forensics, or compulsion of the operator — none of which are realistic in routine gambling disputes or compliance reviews.
What this tool does not measure
Three things, deliberately. First, it does not score the legal risk of using a no-KYC site from a regulated jurisdiction. If gambling is illegal where you live, a perfect privacy score does not make it legal. Second, it does not score the financial risk of a given operator — see our Best Anonymous Betting Sites 2026 rankings for that. Third, it does not score operational security inside the gambling site itself (password manager, 2FA, withdrawal consistency). Those matter, but they are site-specific and outside the scope of a generic assessment.
Why coin choice is the heaviest weighted question
Once a coin leaves your wallet and lands in a gambling site's hot wallet, the privacy of that transaction is locked in. Bitcoin and Ethereum are public ledgers: every deposit, withdrawal, and consolidation is permanent, linkable, and increasingly enriched with off-chain data from exchanges and analytics firms. Monero hides sender, receiver, and amount by default. Zcash shielded transactions do too. USDT and other stablecoins are typically on transparent chains (Ethereum, Tron) and inherit their traceability.
This is why a bettor can have the best VPN, the most paranoid email setup, and a dedicated device, and still be de-anonymised by a single transparent-chain deposit. Coin choice is the first thing to fix because nothing else matters if the on-chain evidence is already in the public record.
Why wallet hygiene is weighted almost as heavily
Even a privacy coin can be de-anonymised if the wallet that received the funds has ever touched a KYC source. If your "anonymous" Monero came from a centralised exchange that required your passport, an investigator who serves that exchange with a subpoena learns that the withdrawal address belongs to you — and that address is now linked to every subsequent deposit, even on a different chain. A truly anonymous setup needs a clean wallet: one whose entire history is privacy-preserving from its first block to its last.
How to use this tool alongside our other guides
The checker is most useful as a diagnostic. If your score is lower than you expected, the recommendations will point you at the right article in our library:
- Low score on coin choice or wallet hygiene? Read How to Buy Crypto Anonymously for Betting and Anonymous Betting with Monero & Zcash.
- Low score on network or device privacy? Read Best VPN for Online Gambling and VPN & Tor for Online Privacy.
- Low score on account/email separation? Read Anonymous Betting with No ID and Is Anonymous Betting Legal?
- Low score on KYC trigger awareness? Read Understanding KYC in Gambling and How to Withdraw from No-KYC Betting Sites.
For the broader picture, the Complete Guide to Anonymous Betting covers the privacy-versus-protection tradeoff in full. If you are choosing between no-KYC and regulated sites, the No-KYC vs Regulated Betting Sites comparison breaks down the tradeoffs by factor.
Methodology and limitations
The score weights were derived from a survey of how blockchain-analytics firms (Chainalysis, Elliptic, TRM Labs), gambling-operator compliance teams, and regulator-facing AML vendors actually de-anonymise users in 2026. Weights were tuned against three reference user profiles: a casual Bitcoin bettor using a residential IP, a Monero user with a clean wallet, and a Tor-routed multi-account bonus abuser.
The tool is intentionally simple. It does not model transaction-graph heuristics, address-clustering techniques, timing analysis, or cross-chain bridge correlation. Those are real attack vectors, but scoring them accurately would require knowing the specific coins, exchanges, and operators you use, which is exactly the data the tool is designed not to collect. Instead, the score gives you a defensible privacy baseline and points you at the specific weaknesses to fix first.
Privacy of this tool itself
The checker runs in plain JavaScript inside your browser. No answers, scores, IP addresses, or browser fingerprints are sent to our server, to any analytics service, or to any third party. The page loads one Google Analytics tag and one AdSense script for the surrounding site, but the tool itself does not call either of them. You can verify this by opening your browser's network tab, taking the assessment, and observing that no requests are made during the answer flow. You can also use the tool with the network disabled after the page has loaded — it will work identically.
For users who want to be doubly cautious, opening the tool in a private/incognito window provides a clean session, and the tool does not write to localStorage or cookies. Your previous answers are not remembered between sessions by design.
When to retake the assessment
Three good moments to retake the tool:
- After switching to a privacy coin. If you move from Bitcoin or USDT to Monero, your score should jump by 15-20 points on the coin-choice question alone.
- After setting up a clean wallet. If you migrate to a wallet with no prior KYC-touched history, your wallet-hygiene score should rise by 10-15 points.
- After separating your betting identity from your real-world identity. New email, new username pattern, new device — combined, this usually adds 8-12 points across the account-separation questions.
Most users see meaningful improvement within their first retake. A second retake after 30 days of consistent privacy hygiene is where the remaining edge-case gaps usually surface and can be closed.
Partner offer
If you want to try a partner platform after reading this guide, you can check the current new-user offer on Mostbet. Review the terms first and make sure the platform is appropriate for your jurisdiction.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is my anonymity score calculated?
Your score is the weighted sum of 10 questions covering crypto selection, wallet hygiene, network privacy, account setup, and operational security. Each answer is worth a fixed number of points (0-13) for a total of 100. Weights are tuned to reflect the practical privacy impact of each factor: coin choice and wallet hygiene carry the most weight because they are hardest to change later.
Is the anonymity score checker really private?
Yes. The entire tool runs in your browser using client-side JavaScript. No answers, IP addresses, or scores are sent to our server or any analytics service. You can verify this by opening the page source, disabling your network, and using the tool offline.
What is a good anonymity score for betting?
A score above 75 means you have a strong baseline. 50-75 means you have meaningful privacy exposure in one or two areas, typically coin choice or network privacy. Below 50 means your setup leaks enough identifying information that an investigator could link your gambling activity to your real identity with moderate effort.
Will using a VPN lower my score if the betting site bans VPNs?
It depends on the goal. From a pure network-privacy standpoint, using a commercial VPN consistently scores well. From a practical betting standpoint, VPN use can trigger account flags, withdrawal holds, or TOS violations. The score treats VPN use as a positive for privacy but the recommendations will warn you about operational risk if you select 'always use a VPN' on a site that bans them.
Does this tool recommend specific betting sites?
No. The tool is a privacy self-assessment only. For specific site recommendations, see our Best Anonymous Betting Sites 2026 ranking, which is updated monthly with payout proof and KYC trigger documentation.
Can I improve my score after taking it once?
Yes, the tool is designed to be re-taken. Many of the highest-impact changes (switching to a privacy coin, using a dedicated wallet, separating email identities) only take an afternoon but materially raise your score.
Sources consulted
- Chainalysis — Cryptocurrency investigation and compliance: https://www.chainalysis.com
- Elliptic — Blockchain analytics for financial crime compliance: https://www.elliptic.co
- TRM Labs — Blockchain intelligence: https://www.trmlabs.com
- Monero privacy protocol documentation: https://www.getmonero.org
- Tor Project overview: https://www.torproject.org/about/overview.html.en
- UK Gambling Commission — Age, ID and financial verification: https://www.gamblingcommission.gov.uk/public-and-players/guide/age-and-id-verification
- Sumsub — KYC for Gambling: https://sumsub.com/blog/kyc-in-gambling/