Bitcoin Mixer

We send freshly unlinked BTC to a wallet you control, then delete every record that ties it back to your deposit. No accounts, no email — only your Order ID survives, and it knows nothing about your addresses.

Minimum mix amount
0.001 BTC
No upper cap on Bitcoin mixing
Bitcoin mixer fee
0.5 – 2.5 %
Set by you. Network fee included
BTC tumbler time
10 – 30 min
After 3 network confirmations
No-log mixer
0 logs
Deposit↔payout mapping purged

Mix Bitcoin in two steps

Set your Bitcoin mixer fee, paste the receiving BTC address — Honey generates a one-time deposit address and tumbles your coins.

Pool online Available 143.40 BTC In queue 3 mixes ETA ~18 min

Step 1 — Pick your Bitcoin mixer fee

Set the BTC tumbler fee anywhere from 0.5% to 2.5% — a random-looking percentage is harder to fingerprint on-chain than a flat rate.

Service fee 1.1%
0.5 % 2.5 %

Step 2 — Your receiving Bitcoin address

How the Bitcoin mixer works

Three steps to anonymous Bitcoin — no accounts, no email, no logs linking deposit to payout.

1

Submit your Bitcoin address

Paste a fresh receiving BTC address — Honey’s Bitcoin mixer instantly generates a unique one-time deposit address for your order.

2

Send BTC to the mixer

Send any amount from 0.001 BTC. After 3 network confirmations, the BTC tumbler blends your coins with unrelated UTXOs from the liquidity pool.

3

Receive anonymous Bitcoin

Within 10–30 minutes you receive freshly mixed Bitcoin — split, delayed and unlinkable on-chain. The deposit↔payout mapping is then permanently erased.

Why choose Honey Bitcoin Mixer

Six things this service actually does — calmly and predictably.

🍯

Account-free Bitcoin mixer

No email. No password. No wallet connect. The Order ID is the only thing that ever exists about you here.

🐝

Unrelated UTXO payouts

Coins arrive from completely unrelated UTXOs — different ownership history, different sizes, randomized timing — defeating chain-analysis heuristics.

📜

Signed Letter of Guarantee

Every Bitcoin mixing order ships with a digitally signed Letter of Guarantee — cryptographic proof the BTC tumbling order originated from us.

⏱️

Live BTC mixing tracker

Watch confirmations, the mixing timer and the payout TXID on a live order page. Verify your deposit and payout in any Bitcoin block explorer.

🎚️

User-set mixer fee

Slide the Bitcoin mixer fee between 0.5% and 2.5%. A handpicked, random-looking number is far harder to fingerprint on-chain than a fixed rate.

🧹

No-log: mappings wiped

Once the Letter of Guarantee is generated, the deposit↔payout mapping is purged from our system — nothing left for anyone to leak or subpoena.

Bitcoin mixer — questions people actually ask

Eight things to know before you mix. None of the lazy stuff.

Paste a fresh Bitcoin receiving address into Honey, choose your fee between 0.5% and 2.5%, and send any amount from 0.001 BTC to the one-time deposit address Honey gives you. After 3 network confirmations, fresh BTC from unrelated UTXOs lands at your address in 10–30 minutes — and the deposit↔payout mapping is then deleted.

Three signals matter. First, the service issues a digitally signed Letter of Guarantee before you send any BTC, so a fraud claim is cryptographically resolvable later. Second, the deposit address shown to you is the address that ends up in the Letter — copy-paste-verify before sending. Third, the service does not require your email, ID, or wallet connect. Honey ships all three by default.

The Letter of Guarantee you saved before depositing is your fallback: it cryptographically binds your deposit address, your receiving address, and the order. Even if the front-end is briefly unreachable, the Letter remains verifiable against our public signing key, and queued payouts process through to completion.

They can ask, but the Order ID alone does not reveal the deposit↔payout link — that mapping is deleted from our database after every completed order. We retain only an Order ID, an amount, a service fee, and a timestamp; no IPs, no email. There is nothing more to hand over because we never collected it.

For a one-off privacy event — receiving a public donation, separating salary flows, withdrawing from a KYC exchange to long-term storage — yes. A single mix breaks the cluster between your tagged history and a fresh wallet, and the chain-analysis tools that exchanges and forensics firms rely on cannot easily reverse it. For continuous privacy, combine a mix with a non-custodial wallet and avoid round amounts.

When the payout transaction lands at your receiving address and the Letter of Guarantee is generated, the database row that paired your deposit with your receiving address is removed — not encrypted, not archived. What survives is an Order ID, an amount, a service fee, and a timestamp; none of those reveal a Bitcoin address.

For amounts above ~1 BTC, yes. Two or three smaller mixes spaced over a few days defeat amount-based correlation more reliably than one large mix. Avoid round numbers like exactly 1 BTC — they are correlatable on amount alone. Honey orders above 5 BTC are also auto-split across multiple liquidity pools internally.

A mixer doesn’t remove old transactions — the blockchain is immutable. What it does is sever the on-chain link between your old wallet (which is forever public) and a freshly funded one. After a mix, your new wallet receives BTC from inputs that have no transactional history with your old wallet, so chain-analysis clustering cannot tie the two together.

About Honey Bitcoin Mixer

A short, honest read on who actually uses a Bitcoin mixer, what it does, and what it doesn’t.

Who actually uses a Bitcoin mixer?

A Bitcoin mixer is not a tool for hiding — it’s a tool for not being watched by default. The people who reach for one are mostly ordinary: a freelancer who doesn’t want every client to see their full salary history, a journalist receiving tips on a public address, a charity treasurer separating donor flows, a long-term holder who once cashed out through a KYC exchange and now wants a clean wallet for cold storage. Privacy is the default state of cash. On-chain Bitcoin, by itself, isn’t.

How the blockchain quietly leaks your identity

Two things, working together, expose almost everyone. First, every KYC exchange registers your name, document and IP against every withdrawal address — a permanent identity tag that never expires. Second, on-chain heuristics (common-input-ownership, change-output detection, peel-chain analysis) cluster every address you ever spend from into a single wallet. Hit either one alone and you’re mostly fine. Hit both — which everyone does, eventually — and the entire history of a wallet, including coins you haven’t spent yet, is linked to a real-world identity by an algorithm that costs the watcher essentially nothing to run.

Bitcoin mixer vs CoinJoin vs new wallet — what’s the difference?

A new wallet alone fixes nothing — the moment you fund it from a known address, it inherits all the labels. CoinJoin (Whirlpool, JoinMarket, Wasabi) is excellent but requires a compatible wallet, a coordinator, ongoing maintenance, and only mixes with whatever peers happen to be online at the same time. A custodial Bitcoin mixer like Honey trades that complexity for one short interaction: you send BTC in, you get unrelated BTC out, the mapping is destroyed. It’s the right tool when you don’t want the long-running coordination overhead and just need a clean break for a single transfer.

What happens between “Generate address” and your payout

  1. You paste a fresh receiving Bitcoin address — Honey derives a unique deposit address from a wallet that has never been associated with this address before.
  2. You broadcast a single Bitcoin transaction to that deposit address. Nothing on our side knows who you are; we only see an inbound UTXO.
  3. After 3 confirmations the BTC tumbler signs a payout from a separate, unrelated set of UTXOs in our liquidity pool — different sizes, different ownership history, different timing.
  4. The payout transaction lands at your receiving address. The link between deposit address and payout address is then deleted from our database.

A blockchain analyst looking at your new address sees coins arriving from inputs that have no transactional history with the wallet you funded the mixer from. The cluster breaks.

Why we built a no-log Bitcoin mixer (and what that actually means)

“No logs” is one of the most abused phrases in crypto privacy. We mean it literally: after your Letter of Guarantee is generated, the row that linked your deposit address to your receiving address is removed. Not encrypted, not archived — gone. What remains is an Order ID, an amount, and a timestamp, none of which reveal a Bitcoin address. We don’t store your IP, we don’t require an email, and we don’t run analytics scripts that talk to third parties. The simplest way to be unable to leak data is to never have it; that is the design philosophy of this BTC tumbler from day one.

What Honey will not help with

Honey is built for everyday financial privacy — restoring the default that on-chain Bitcoin took away. It is not, and will not be, a tool for laundering proceeds of theft, ransomware, or sanctioned transactions. Coins flagged for active criminal investigation are turned away at the deposit-screening stage, and we cooperate with the small number of legitimate compliance requests that pass that filter. Use a Bitcoin mixer the same way you use cash: for your own privacy, in jurisdictions where that is legal. Beyond that line, you’re on your own.