What Is CoinJoin and How It Improves Bitcoin Privacy
Bitcoin is often called anonymous, but in reality, it’s only pseudonymous. Every transaction is recorded on a public ledger — and anyone can trace coins between addresses. That’s where CoinJoin comes in.
At wmiran.com, we support privacy tools that give users control. In this blog, we’ll explain what CoinJoin is, how it works, and how it protects your Bitcoin transactions from surveillance and tracking.
What Is CoinJoin?
CoinJoin is a Bitcoin privacy technique that combines multiple users’ transactions into a single one — making it difficult to tell who sent what to whom.
Instead of broadcasting a normal transaction, several participants coordinate and send their coins together in one big transaction with multiple inputs and outputs.
How It Works
- Users join a CoinJoin round through a compatible wallet
- The wallet combines transactions and creates a joint transaction
- Each participant signs only their portion
- The combined transaction is broadcast and confirmed
Because all outputs look similar in amount, it becomes nearly impossible to link which input corresponds to which output.
Why Use CoinJoin?
- Break the link: Disrupt the trace between your old and new addresses
- Improve fungibility: Make each bitcoin unit equal in privacy
- Protect yourself: Avoid surveillance, blacklists, and address profiling
Supported Wallets
Several wallets offer built-in CoinJoin support:
- Wasabi Wallet
- Samourai Wallet (via Whirlpool)
- Sparrow Wallet (manual & Whirlpool)
wmiran.com and Privacy-Conscious Users
At wmiran.com, we respect your right to swap assets without KYC and without surveillance. Combine our private swaps with tools like CoinJoin to further protect your identity and transaction history.
Conclusion
CoinJoin is a powerful way to take back your Bitcoin privacy. It’s not illegal — it’s just smart. By combining transactions with others, you confuse chain analysis and make your coins harder to track.
Explore your options, use CoinJoin where possible, and trust wmiran.com for anonymous, secure swaps with zero compromise on privacy.