Why a mixer in the first place?
Bitcoin is brilliant money, but it isn't private money. Every transaction sits on a public ledger that anyone can read forever. Chain-analysis companies turn that ledger into reports they sell to banks, exchanges and governments. The moment one of your addresses gets tied to your name, every coin connected to it inherits that connection. That is not what most people thought they were signing up for when they bought their first Bitcoin.
Mixero is what happens when you take that problem seriously. A friendly, non-custodial service that pools your deposit with unrelated coins, gives you back outputs from somewhere else entirely, and walks away without keeping notes.
Who Mixero is for
Traders who would rather competitors not map their position sizing. Salaried workers paid in BTC who don't need their employer reading their spending habits. Donors to legal causes that happen to be politically awkward to declare. Long-term holders moving funds between wallets without leaving a permanent breadcrumb behind. The use case usually doesn't matter to us — and that's the point of the service.
"Nothing to hide" is a phrase mostly used by people on the comfortable side of the conversation. Privacy is not the opposite of honesty. It's the opposite of being watched.
The four principles
These are the operational rules Mixero holds itself to. They are written down deliberately — principles that live only in marketing copy tend to slip when nobody is looking.
1 — No accounts. Ever.
The cheapest way to leak user data is to collect it. Mixero asks for nothing beyond the deposit and your destination addresses. No email, no phone number, no document, no captcha that uploads your fingerprint.
2 — Logs disappear with the session.
Operational data exists only while a mix is in flight, because that's how the service knows where to send your payout. Once the guarantee window closes, that data is purged. There is no analytics archive, no "kept for compliance" folder.
3 — The link must break, by construction.
Your deposit and your payout never share a transaction. The coins you receive are drawn from earlier, unrelated orders in the Mixero pool. Chain analysis loses the trail because the trail genuinely isn't there.
4 — Every promise is signed.
Before any coins move, Mixero generates a PGP-signed letter of guarantee. The signature can be verified against our public key. That is your leverage if anything ever needs to be disputed — not a screenshot, a cryptographic receipt.
What Mixero is not
Mixero is not a wallet. It does not store your keys, hold your balance, or let you log back in to "check on your mix". Mixero is not an exchange. It does not convert one cryptocurrency to another, nor does it offer order books or trading pairs. Mixero is not a custodian. The service touches your coins for the duration of a session and not a minute longer.
Mixero does one thing: it takes Bitcoin in and returns Bitcoin that no longer points back to where it came from. That's the whole job.
What to expect next
If you want the engineering view, the How it works page covers the pool, the randomisation, and why the on-chain link genuinely breaks. If you want the operational view, the Trust page walks through the letter of guarantee, the no-logs policy and how disputes are handled. If you just want to mix something, the Guide takes about five minutes to read.
