Bitcoin exposes your data—Monero gives you private digital cash.

What you think you’re getting with Bitcoin, you’ll find with Monero.




Privacy built in from the start.

Many have believed Bitcoin can be 'anonymous'—but that’s a myth. In reality, Bitcoin is a transparent ledger, where every transaction, including amounts, sender/receiver addresses, and more, are permanently visible online. Bitcoin’s transparency makes it even less private than a traditional bank account. That’s why cypherpunks designed Monero with default privacy, from the ground up. Just like physical cash.

Privacy, Perfected

With Monero, your financial activity stays truly private. No corporation, government, or third party can view your transaction details. Only the sender and receiver know the amount transferred — and no one can see your balance. Your money, your business.

Security You Can Trust

Monero is an open-source, independently audited project that upholds the highest security standards crafted by some of the brightest minds in cryptography and blockchain. Monero development is supported by a Community Crowdfunding System which enables continuous innovation.

Freedom Through Privacy

Monero restores your right to financial privacy. With privacy-by-default, it protects users from mass surveillance and censorship, safeguarding true personal freedom. Need transparency? Monero offers that too — selectively. Individuals or organizations can prove their balances when they choose.

Low Inflation, Fair Distribution

Monero maintains a low and constantly decreasing annual inflation rate. There was no premine, no ICO — every coin has been mined fairly since 2014. Monero's “tail emission” also ensures long-term network security and miner incentives.

Built in Scarcity

There are fewer Monero in circulation today than Bitcoin — and this will remain true until at least 2040. As the world seeks private alternatives to offshore banking, Monero is positioned to capture a market much larger than its current value.

Fast, Affordable Transactions

Monero transactions appear instantly in your wallet, with funds spendable within minutes. Most transactions cost less than a penny, making Monero one of the fastest and most cost-effective ways to move value privately.


Bitcoin Isn’t a Privacy Solution

Bitcoin is a powerful project that pushes governments to compete with private, hard money. But it’s a mistake to believe it solves privacy concerns. While Bitcoin’s transparency benefits institutions that require public auditing, most individuals and businesses will prefer truly private money — because no one wants to expose their entire financial history with every transaction.

Monero Means Money

Watch Dr. Daniel Kim Explain Monero's Value

Monero is a project from the cypherpunk community, completely decentralized, without any central authority directing it. It is impossible to censor, unlike with transparent Bitcoin addresses. Monero is unstoppable money for all.

Afraid the government will ban it? Think twice.

Monero’s true anonymity makes it a digital offshore account — without the need for banks or bureaucratic barriers. Banning it would be nearly impossible: Monero runs on a decentralized network that cannot be shut down. And ironically, even governments could find value in using Monero to discreetly move or protect their own assets.Watch this video below about this market behvior.

Banning Monero Would Only Make It More Valuable

Monero is scarce, private money — a combination that mirrors the appeal of physical gold. Its built-in utility ensures demand won't vanish with a ban; it would only intensify, driving even greater scarcity and pushing prices higher. Monero is anti-fragile: it protects both your wealth from inflation and your finances from surveillance.




Evolving Trends

A Smart Addition to Your Investment Portfolio

Monero is a cryptocurrency like no other. With a low correlation to Bitcoin, it offers true diversification — a critical factor for maximizing future returns. Today, Monero is a $3.2 billion asset aiming to disrupt the offshore banking market. In a world where money is becoming fully digital, does it make sense to rely on physical offshore accounts to protect your wealth? Monero offers a smarter, more private solution for the digital age.

Monero Has Surpassed Bitcoin Where Privacy Matters

While most illicit activity still happens with traditional currencies like the dollar, Bitcoin’s transparent blockchain has led to retroactive tracking and accusations — even against innocent users. Without access to expensive forensic tools, it’s impossible to know if a Bitcoin transaction is "tainted". Monero changes that. With full default privacy, it protects individuals from unjust scrutiny and safeguards honest users from being falsely implicated.

Hackers and Experts Prefer Monero

In the world of cybersecurity, privacy isn't optional. Monero's cutting-edge technology has made it the cryptocurrency of choice among hackers and privacy experts. As Bitcoin’s transparency becomes a liability, we’re witnessing a clear shift: those who understand the stakes are moving to Monero.

Want to Acquire Monero?

Because Monero is so effective at protecting privacy, governments worldwide have pressured traditional cryptocurrency exchanges to delist it — making it harder for citizens to purchase Monero with local currency. Fortunately, the Monero community is global and resilient. Thanks to the voluntary efforts of developers and supporters, easy alternatives now exist. Explore the options below and find the best way for you to acquire Monero.

Open an Exchange Account

Link a bank account or use Apple Pay to purchase Monero directly. This method requires full "Know Your Customer" (KYC) identity verification.

Decentralized Options

Already own crypto? Use KYCnot.me as a guide for services. Some of the latest swap technology includes Haveno and Unstoppable.

Set Up a Wallet

Use the official Monero wallet on PC, or mobile apps like Cake Wallet and Monerujo. Hardware wallets like Ledger offer extra security.

Withdraw to Your Wallet

After buying Monero, withdraw it to a wallet you control. Learn how to securely send and receive Monero transactions here.

F.A.Q.

Still in doubt about how to buy and store it? Read the basics here.

  • What exactly is Monero?

    Monero is a cryptocurrency, just like Bitcoin. Monero is an open-source software project that runs on its own blockchain and it serves as a currency, just like the dollar. Many people leave their computers "mining" it, which means they lend their PC's processing power in order to validate all transactions on the network. By doing this, all this processing power is used to guarantee fair emission of new coins (which causes the decreasing annual inflation of ) and to protect your money from hackers. Monero has a decreasing inflation that will eventually tend to zero, and because low inflation leads to scarcity, it works as a store of value, just like Gold or Bitcoin. Differently from Bitcoin, though, Monero has full privacy, which means it hides your balance and your transactions from being visible on the network for others.

  • Monero has cutting edge privacy tech, such as RingCTs, Stealth Addresses, Bulletproofs and Dandelion++. Ring Confidential Transactions (RingCTs) are used to obfuscate the sender of a transaction and the amount, while one-time stealth addresses are used to hide the address of the recipient using a method known as DKSAP. Bulletproofs is a protocol that improved RingCTs, reducing the size of the transactions, resulting in faster verification times and lower fees. Dandelion++ on the other hand was developed to obscure the IP address of the sender device.

  • Monero developers have already tested the concept of atomic swaps between it and Bitcoin, which will happen directly from Monero's wallet and will be processed through Bitcoin's blockchain. Users in the near future will be able to swap easily one asset to the other, without having to rely on central authorities, such as exchanges, making it the best possible privacy solution for Bitcoin. In other words, to ban Monero, governments would first have to censor the whole Bitcoin blockchain, which won't happen, because Bitcoin is already rooted in society. So nobody will be able to prevent people from having privacy.

  • There was never a premine on Monero. This means no one controls vast amounts of coins, since all coins ever generated have always been distributed for the miners. The miners receive coins based on how much work they put into validating and defending the network, so it is a form of financial revenue they get for their service. Since at the beginning (2014) there were no coins in circulation, inflation was high. Now that there are {{ supply}} units in circulation, the annual inflation is just . The payout per block decreases over time, and so will the the annual inflation rate slowly decrease towards zero. The demand for fungible, digital, privacy-oriented hard money will likely skyrocket in the next few years and outpace its inflation, so investors expect a considerable rise in prices.

  • Bitcoin's price is way higher than Monero's since the former was introduced in 2009, while the latter only in 2014. When Bitcoin was created, the technology behind Monero didn't even exist. Bitcoin's methods were themselves a huge leap in tech. Now Bitcoin has a legion of investors, is an established cryptocurrency, and have a 1T USD marketcap. However Bitcoin has many flaws, such as transaction cost and time, and mostly lack of privacy. Bitcoin has no privacy at all. All transactions and balances are stored in a chain of blocks, and are totally visible for all internet users. In this sense, Bitcoin can't work as money, because one of the main atributes of a good money is fungibility, which is ability for all units being indistinguishble from the others. Since all Bitcoins' transactions are visible, you can differentiate one from the other. For example, you can choose to accept transactions from one address, but choose to forbid people from accepting another. This will inevitably allow governments to censor certain addresses based on what their owners are doing. Therefore, the lack of fungibility isn't a desired feature for good money. In this sense, Monero is much better money than Bitcoin. Monero is faster, cheaper to transact and completely fungible. You can't see differences between different Moneroj (Moneroj is plural from Monero), so you also can't censor people. With Monero people are free, while with Bitcoin people are at the mercy of their governments leaders.

  • While nobody can predict exactly what will happen in the future, Monero's community expect that there will be huge demand for privacy in the next few years. With our society relying more on digital processes, it is plausible that such type of tech will eventually find its niche in our daily lives. Monero is a bet on the digitalization of money, a bet in the need for privacy and also a bet that governments will lose the monopoly over money. In term of returns, while BTC took 900 days to achieve 37x in its first bull market cycle, Monero took 1279 days to give 95x return. However you must not take this as financial advice, and you should invest at your own risk.

  • Simply put, open an account on a trusted exchange, such as Kraken or Binance. You just need to write your data in their form. After that, complete the whole registration process, which may include KYC procedures, like sending them a picture of your document and face. Also remember to enable two-factor authentication, which prevents hackers from stealing your funds and also allow withdrawals. Then send a wire transfer to the exchange and in a few hours they will update your balance. When this happens, buy your Monero and proceed for withdrawals.

  • Now download a software wallet for Monero on your phone (such as Cake Wallet or Monerujo), or for your computer (the official wallet). You can also buy a hardware wallet such as the Ledger. When you complete this step, you can login on your exchange account and ask for a withdrawal of funds. This means you are going to ask the exchange to send all your Moneroj from your account into the address of your wallet. After that, you already have full control of your funds.