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Zadarma

Approved

zadarma.com

Established VoIP / virtual-number provider (since ~2006, 2M+ users, 110 countries). Operationally reliable, but full mandatory KYC: passport or ID scan, a SELFIE holding the passport, and a utility-bill address proof are required to activate any number — including SMS reception. Listed here as a counter-example: trustworthy as a business, disqualifying for a no-KYC workflow.

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zadarma.com
https://zadarma.com
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Review

Editorial

Overview

Zadarma is one of the oldest still-running VoIP and virtual-number providers on the market — roughly 19 years of continuous operation, more than 2 million registered users across 160 countries, and 30,000+ phone numbers in 110 countries. Its product stack is mature: virtual numbers with SMS reception, cloud PBX with IVR, call recording, speech-to-text, SIP trunking, an open API, and prices that start at roughly $2 / month per number. As a business it is exactly what its 2-decade reputation suggests — reliable, technically deep, and not a scam.

It is also completely unsuited for a no-KYC workflow, and this directory lists it specifically so that fact is documented clearly, with sources, instead of being absorbed by repeated user questions.

Privacy & KYC — the disqualifying part

Zadarma sits at the bottom tier of this directory’s privacy ladder: KYC Tier L5 — Mandatory. Number activation is gated behind a full identity package, drawn directly from Zadarma’s own support documentation:

  • A copy of a passport or national ID card
  • A registration certificate (for business accounts)
  • An address-confirmation document — usually a utility bill
  • A photograph of the user holding the passport — a face-with-document selfie, the same biometric pattern KYC vendors use to bind a face to an ID

For SMS reception specifically — the use case that brought most readers to this page — the requirement is reinforced: the passport / ID scan is mandatory and the account must pre-pay three months of service before SMS becomes active. Until verification clears (anywhere from a few minutes to a full working day), the number is unable to send or receive anything.

This is not a soft tier of identity collection. It is a complete identity bundle — government document, biometric face match, real-world address — held custodially alongside call and message logs. For a user whose goal is to avoid linking a phone number to a legal identity, the entire premise of the service is the opposite of what is needed.

Why the trust score is still high

The trust score of 75 / 100 may look incongruous next to the overall score of 3.5 / 10. It is intentional. This directory separates privacy from trustworthiness:

  • The service has been running since approximately 2006, surviving the entire VoIP-vendor consolidation cycle
  • The user base is large and verifiable, and reviews on Capterra, Software Suggest and similar platforms are consistent over many years
  • The platform behaves as advertised — numbers work, calls connect, the PBX features are real, and pricing is transparent
  • There is no public history of fund misappropriation, sudden account closures without recourse, or undocumented service changes

If you decide you can accept the KYC trade-off — for a regulated business PBX, an international contact number for support staff, a sales-ops setup — Zadarma is not the wrong choice. It earns its high trust rating for exactly that audience. The overall score is held at 3.5 / 10 because the only axis that matters in this directory — operating without surrendering identity — is the one Zadarma has chosen, explicitly and in writing, not to support.

Pricing

  • Virtual numbers: from $2 / month; New York US number around $4 / month; US 800 toll-free around $6 / month
  • Standard call plan: 100 free monthly minutes to 5 popular destinations; incoming calls on most numbers are free
  • Office plan: around $22 / month
  • Corporation plan: around $44 / month
  • Payment rails: fiat only — card, PayPal and wire. No crypto support documented.

Verdict

Zadarma is listed, not recommended. It is here as a documented counter-example so that visitors searching for it find a sourced, honest assessment instead of a circular reference loop, and so that users who already use Zadarma understand exactly what they have signed up for on the privacy axis. If your threat model tolerates a passport scan plus a selfie binding your face to that passport plus an address proof, in exchange for a battle-tested VoIP stack, Zadarma is a sensible business-grade choice. If your threat model is the one this directory is built for, browse the SMS category filtered by KYC Tier L0 / L1 and pay in crypto for a shorter-lived but identity-free number instead.

Community summary

Zadarma is a 19-year-old VoIP and virtual-number provider with 2M+ users across 110 countries — a perfectly trustworthy business — but it requires full mandatory KYC (passport / ID scan, selfie holding the passport, and a utility-bill address proof) before any number can send or receive SMS or calls. It earns a low score here because its identity surface is the opposite of what this directory exists to recommend.

Pros
  • + 19+ years of continuous operation — one of the oldest VoIP providers still running
  • + 2M+ registered users across 160 countries
  • + 30,000+ numbers available in 110 countries
  • + Mature feature set — virtual PBX, IVR, call recording, speech-to-text, SIP trunking, API
  • + Cheap entry point — virtual numbers from $2 / month
  • + Free incoming calls on most virtual numbers
  • + Well-documented support, FAQ and integration ecosystem
Cons
  • MANDATORY full KYC before a number can send or receive — no anonymous use is possible
  • Requires a copy of passport or national ID card
  • Requires a SELFIE holding the passport (face-with-document verification)
  • Requires a utility bill or equivalent address proof
  • SMS reception specifically requires the same verification + 3 months prepayment
  • Custodial account model — full call / SMS log retention sits with the provider
  • No crypto payment — pricing in fiat via card / PayPal / wire
  • No Tor / onion endpoint — clearnet only
  • Subject to the home jurisdiction’s data-sharing regime, regardless of where the number is issued