Privacy-o-meter for Bitcoin Transactions

Privacy score result
for the transaction:
0
Critical
Privacy
issues:
5

Matched addresses identified

Using several indicators we were able to link the similar types of addresses involved in this transaction. We identified which of the recipient addresses possibly belong to one or more senders. Such matching significantly reduces the anonymity of addresses.
Matched inputs & outputs
0.00043401  BTC 17.10 USD
0.00063097  BTC 23.76 USD
0.00067198  BTC 25.30 USD
0.00105552  BTC 39.74 USD
0.00032000  BTC 12.05 USD
0.00063496  BTC 23.91 USD
0.00043834  BTC 17.27 USD
0.00796155  BTC 299.76 USD
0.00074819  BTC 28.17 USD
0.00085431  BTC 32.17 USD
0.00042575  BTC 16.03 USD
0.00017585  BTC 6.62 USD
0.00064411  BTC 24.25 USD
0.00095733  BTC 36.04 USD
0.00245492  BTC 96.72 USD
0.00099259  BTC 37.37 USD
0.00048400  BTC 18.22 USD
0.00060669  BTC 22.84 USD
0.00038253  BTC 14.40 USD
0.00056854  BTC 22.40 USD
0.00254790  BTC 95.93 USD
0.00423945  BTC 159.62 USD
0.00203229  BTC 76.52 USD
0.00049904  BTC 18.79 USD
0.00040969  BTC 15.43 USD
0.00197290  BTC 77.73 USD
0.00033294  BTC 13.12  USD
0.03240000  BTC 1,276.56  USD

Issues that are possible to fix

Co-spending
Unless it's a CoinJoin transaction it's safe to assume that all input addresses belong to one person
How to improve?
Try not to send a BTC amount higher than you hold on one of your addresses. If you value your privacy on Bitcoin more than the transaction costs, then opt to send more transactions. Your addresses will not be linked to each other.
Round value
If one of the outputs has a round value (like exactly 1 BTC) — this output can be considered as the recipient
How to improve?
Next time don't send round values: instead of sending 0.1 BTC, send for example 0.10124.
Discrepancy: unnecessary input
The smaller input is unnecessary, as whichever of the outputs is the recipient, there's no need to include that input
How to improve?
The smaller input address is uneccessarily added to the transaction. Avoid doing this.

Software-dependent issues that are not fixable

Same address in inputs
There's multiple occurences of the same address in inputs
Discrepancy: various input types
The inputs are of different types. That means the sender is probably using the software allowing to create the same address type for the change as the recipient has, trying to circumvent the script_types heuristic
We use 100+ indicators to measure the privacy scores of Bitcoin transactions.

In some cases the score may be improved, while some indicators are dependent on the software used to interact with the Bitcoin blockchain. Such privacy issues are not possible to fix unless the user changes the app or website used.
Critical - The identified issues are significantly endangering the privacy of the parties involved. Usually, the critical score is shown when it is possible to group the addresses that belong to the same owner or when the transaction has a lot of privacy issues.

Low - The identified issues are severely jeopardizing the privacy of the parties involved. Usually the Low score is assigned to the transactions with a lot of privacy issues.

Moderate - The identified issues are not that severe but can still be used by tracking tools to trace your transactions.

High - The identified issues are negligible and do not pose a serious threat to the privacy of involved parties/addresses.

Healthy - The transaction has no privacy issues. Third parties can’t extract any privacy-related information about the transaction or addresses involved.

General guidelines for sending BTC transactions

Blockchair can not help you improve the privacy of your
transactions but here are some basic recommendations
on how to stay anonymous on the Bitcoin network
Don't send round numbers

Don't send round amounts. Instead of sending 0.1 BTC, send 0.10125

Use Bitcoin Mixers

Mixers add an additional layer of privacy to a transaction to avoid exposing user identities.

Avoid reusing wallets

Don't send your Bitcoin change to the same address you use for sending bitcoins.

Avoid including many of your addresses in one transaction

Any time you can, try not to send BTC from your various Bitcoin addresses.

Avoid using "send everything" option

If you are withdrawing funds from an exchange, it is okay.
If you're moving funds to another wallet, do not transfer the whole amount to another address. It greatly compromises your privacy.

The detailed list of indicators and recommendations are available in API docs

Check all indicators

Get privacy scores with Blockchair API for free

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