We route your transfer through several independent exchanges. The entry exchange never sees the recipient. The exit exchange never sees you. Nobody, including us, has the full picture.
Pick a currency and amount. Get a one-time deposit address.
Funds hop through independent exchanges.
No on-chain link between sender and receiver addresses.
We built PriveFlow because "Bitcoin is anonymous" was always wrong. The blockchain is the most public ledger ever invented. Pay a freelancer in stablecoins, accept a donation, buy ETH for a kid: all of it ends up in a permanent searchable history. We do not fix that. We let you, sometimes, put a wall between two transactions.
And we made it for the days you actually need it. No app to install, no account to set up, no "sign in to continue." Open the page, paste an address, send. The same way you would use a calculator.
We are not going to list use cases. Privacy in money is the default expectation everywhere except crypto. If your bank published every transaction publicly, you would switch banks. PriveFlow exists because that is already true on every chain.
What this isn't, plainly. Not a mixer. Not a tool to evade sanctions. Not for hiding stolen funds. The exchanges we route through screen for those things. They just don't share which sender went to which recipient.
Every transfer is split across independent exchanges. The entry exchange only knows you sent funds; the exit exchange only knows where they ended up. There is no on-chain edge connecting your wallet to the recipient.
Your crypto never touches a wallet we control, because we do not have one. Funds move directly from your address through the exchange chain to the recipient. We watch the timing, never the money.
Encrypted addresses, hashed IPs, and routing metadata are deleted automatically three days after a transfer completes or expires. After that, even we cannot reconstruct who sent what to whom.