Mixero is a friendly, non-custodial Bitcoin mixer that breaks the on-chain link between your wallet and your destinations. No accounts, no questions, no leftover records — just clean BTC delivered wherever you need it.
Mixero is a non-custodial Bitcoin mixer that pools your deposit with unrelated coins and sends back outputs from somewhere else entirely. The technology behind it is CoinJoin — a well-known approach for combining many users' transactions into a single shared one — but the operational rules around it are what make the service practical to actually use. No accounts. No identity checks. No questionnaire about where your Bitcoin came from. The mixer touches your coins for the duration of an order and not a minute longer.
The reason people reach for a Bitcoin mixer in the first place is that Bitcoin is not the cash-equivalent it is often described as. The chain is a public ledger that anyone can read forever, and chain-analysis companies have spent the last decade turning that readability into commercial products sold to banks, exchanges and governments. Once one of your addresses is connected to your name, every coin that has ever passed through it inherits that connection. Mixero exists to interrupt that arrangement, surgically and without ceremony.
What separates this mixer from the alternatives is mostly what it refuses to do. Mixero refuses to keep logs after the order is done. It refuses to collect identity data it does not need. It refuses to score deposits against opaque blocklists or invent reasons to deny a session. The result is a service that does one thing — returning Bitcoin to you in a form that no longer points back to your original deposit — and tries to do that one thing without leaving anything behind.
Six things this mixer gets right so you can mix Bitcoin and move on with your day. No questionnaires, no friction, no leftover trail on the chain.
Your deposit joins a pool of unrelated UTXOs. The mixer pays you back from coins that have never been in your wallet before — the on-chain link is broken cleanly, not blurred or "tumbled" in name only.
Mixero only holds session data long enough to honour your order. After the guarantee window, every record is purged — no analytics archive, no "kept just in case" folder, no IP logs tied to mixing sessions.
Every order opens with a PGP-signed letter naming your deposit address. Save it. It is your verifiable, cryptographic proof — not a vague promise tucked into a footer or a support-ticket conversation.
Reach Mixero through a Tor onion address that mirrors the clearnet site. The mixing flow works identically over Tor — without leaning on the certificate authority chain — for users in restrictive networks or just careful by default.
Pick an immediate payout or a delay window of your choice. The mixer scatters the broadcast time at random inside that window so timing-correlation attacks against your order lose the thread.
Split your payout across as many as eight Bitcoin addresses. The more destinations you use, the smaller the cluster around each output and the harder the trail is to follow for any chain-analysis tool.
From the first click to the last confirmation, a complete mixer session takes about three minutes of attention. Here is the whole flow at a glance.
Enter one to eight Bitcoin destination addresses, choose the mixer fee, pick an immediate or delayed payout. No account or registration needed.
Download the PGP-signed letter of guarantee. It commits the mixer to the exact deposit address you are about to send your Bitcoin to.
Send the deposit from your wallet to the Mixero address. The mixer waits for the required confirmations, then your order enters the active mixing queue.
Receive payouts from unrelated UTXOs in the Mixero pool, sent to your destination addresses according to your shares and chosen delay. Order complete.
Bitcoin was sold as cash for the internet, but the ledger it runs on is closer to a permanent receipt printed in the sky. Every transaction, every counterparty, every balance is readable forever by anyone with a block explorer. Chain-analysis firms package that readability into reports they sell on to banks, exchanges, regulators and law-enforcement agencies. The cash-like properties that drew most users to Bitcoin in the first place have been quietly eroded as a result, and most holders only realise that fact after a real-world consequence has already happened to them.
The point of a Bitcoin mixer is to reverse that erosion for a single, specific use of your coins. A CoinJoin mixer like Mixero takes your deposit, drops it into a shared pool of unrelated outputs, and pays you back from coins that came in from elsewhere. The on-chain trail between the wallet that funded the mix and the wallet that received the cleaned coins genuinely does not exist after the order is complete — not because anyone is hiding it, but because there was never a transaction on the chain connecting the two.
Useful applications are unglamorous and ordinary. A trader who would rather competitors not map their position sizing in real time. A salaried worker paid in Bitcoin who would prefer their employer not see exactly what they spend on, or where. A donor to a legal cause that is socially awkward to declare publicly. A long-term holder shifting coins between wallets without leaving a permanent paper trail behind that movement. Every one of those people benefits from a private Bitcoin mixer that does not interrogate them at the door.
Three approaches people try when they want to keep their Bitcoin private on a public chain. Only one of them is actually built for the job.
| Feature | Mixero mixer | Central exchange | Manual coin control |
|---|---|---|---|
| No registration required | ✓ | × | ✓ |
| No identity check | ✓ | × | ✓ |
| Breaks on-chain link | ✓ | ~ | ✓ |
| PGP letter of guarantee | ✓ | × | × |
| Randomised payout delay | ✓ | × | ~ |
| Up to 8 mixed outputs | ✓ | × | ~ |
| Setup effort | low | low | high |
The full list lives on the dedicated FAQ page. Here are the four questions that come up most often when people open their first Mixero order.

Open a session, paste your Bitcoin destinations, save the letter of guarantee. The mixer handles the rest in about three minutes.
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