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Which CDNs Support Registration Without ID Verification? A Full Process Hands-On Test

Hands-on comparison of non-ID registration processes for international CDNs like Cloudflare, Bunny, Gcore, Fastly, and CDN07. Full walkthrough from sign-up to going live, showing you which CDNs are truly usable, stable, and reliable.

Tatyana Hammes
Tatyana Hammes

Dec 02, 2025

7 mins to read
Which CDNs Support Registration Without ID Verification? A Full Process Hands-On Test

As someone who's been running websites, CDNs, and servers for over a decade, I've come to recognize a clear fact:

Most international CDNs don't require ID verification to sign up—just an email and password.

But—

"Can sign up" ≠ "Can actually use."
Some CDNs are easy to register for, but the setup process is clunky, convoluted, and full of risk controls.

Some CDNs appear free, but testing reveals all sorts of limitations.

And others are usable, but once live, they suffer from erratic node routing, poor caching, and high latency.

So, in this piece, no theoretical concepts, no copying from official sites, no "marketing fluff."

I'm only talking about—

A handful of non-ID-verified CDNs I've personally registered for, set up, and run myself.

For each one, I went through the following steps:

  • Registration Process
  • DNS Setup
  • Origin Configuration
  • HTTPS Deployment
  • Node Routing Performance
  • Basic Load Testing
  • Real latency tests from Mainland China → Asia → Global

All results are based on real webmaster experience. Zero fluff.cdn-no-realname-registration-guide (2)

1. Cloudflare (The World's Most Stable Non-ID CDN)

Official Site: https://www.cloudflare.com

Registration Process:
✔ Email → Create Account (No ID info required)
✔ Add Domain → Automatic DNS Scan
✔ DNS Propagation → CDN Active

Setup Time: 3 minutes

Test Domain Used: A newly registered .net domain

Hands-On Experience:

1) Performance (Global)

Average towards Asia, excellent towards the US, very stable in Europe.

Hong Kong nodes sometimes route to Korea/India, but overall usable.

2) HTTPS

Automatic certificate issuance. Fully automated process. True "zero-maintenance."

3) Protection

Free tier has basic DDoS mitigation, but under attack, it tends to:

  • Force CAPTCHAs
  • Block legitimate users
  • Show "1020" errors directly

The Bottom Line:

Cloudflare has the simplest sign-up, the most thorough non-ID policy, and is the most stable globally, but its free protection is weak.

Best for: Blogs, small sites, lightweight projects.

2. Bunny CDN (Non-ID + Super Stable Performance)

Official Site: https://bunny.net

Registration Process:
✔ Email → Activation → No personal info required
✔ Create a new Pull Zone (for your origin)
✔ Configure HTTPS
✔ Add CNAME for your domain

Setup Time: 4 minutes

Hands-On Experience:

1) Latency Test (China → Hong Kong Nodes)

  • Beijing: 55--70ms
  • Shanghai: 48--60ms
  • Guangzhou: 36--55ms

Noticeably more stable than Cloudflare for this route.

2) Cache Hit Rate

Bunny's caching strategy is smart:

  • Very stable caching for hot resources
  • On-demand loading for cold resources

Performance for static sites and image-heavy sites is exceptionally good.

3) Protection

Free tier has no high-grade DDoS protection. Won't withstand attacks.

But for speed, stability, and dashboard experience, it's the strongest among free CDNs.

The Bottom Line:

Fast, stable latency, easy to configure. Drawback is limited free bandwidth.

3. Gcore (Non-ID + Simple Configuration)

Official Site: https://gcore.com

Gcore is a major European provider, very common in the gaming industry.

Registration Process:
✔ Email registration → Completely non-ID
✔ Add Domain → Select CDN
✔ Specify Origin
✔ Modify CNAME

Setup Time: 5 minutes

Hands-On Experience:

1) Asia Speed

  • Hong Kong Nodes: 70--85ms (Slightly higher, but stable)
  • Singapore Nodes: 80--100ms
  • Japan Nodes: 90--110ms

Slightly slower than Bunny, but acceptable.

2) Protection

No high-end DDoS protection on the free tier, but good stability, doesn't block indiscriminately.

The Bottom Line:

Best for users targeting Europe/US. Asia performance is "passable."

4. Fastly (Non-ID + Developer Favorite)

Official Site: https://www.fastly.com

Fastly doesn't require ID for registration.

But if you don't know how to write VCL or understand edge computing, you might be lost from the start.

Registration Process:
✔ Email Registration
✔ Create Service
✔ Configure Origin
✔ TLS Setup
✔ Domain Verification

Setup Time: 20 minutes (Not very beginner-friendly)

Hands-On Experience:

1) Performance

Extremely strong speed to the US and Europe.
Fewer nodes in Asia, but network quality is good.

2) Flexibility

Can execute logic at the edge (similar to Serverless).
Very powerful, but not for newcomers.

3) Protection

Free tier has no high-grade DDoS protection. Not suitable for high-risk projects.

The Bottom Line: A developer-centric CDN. Powerful but difficult. Not recommended for beginners.

5. CDN07 (Non-ID Registration + One of the Best Performers for Asia Traffic)

Official Site: https://cdn07.com

Key Point:
CDN07's account system supports non-ID registration (email sign-up is enough),

No ID upload required, no additional review.

And because it's optimized for Asia traffic + includes high-grade protection, the real-world experience is impressive.

Registration Process:
✔ Email Registration → Login (No ID requirements)
✔ Create New Site
✔ Select Regional Nodes (Global by default)
✔ Configure HTTPS
✔ Add CNAME
✔ Go Live

Setup Time: 4 minutes

Hands-On Experience (Focus on Asia Performance)

1) Latency (Mainland China → Hong Kong)

  • Beijing: 45--65ms
  • Shanghai: 42--55ms
  • Guangzhou: 38--50ms

Significantly more stable than Cloudflare for this route.

2) Protection (Even on Trial/Test Plan)

From my manual load tests:

  • Small-scale CC attacks blocked automatically
  • No CAPTCHAs triggered
  • No rate limiting encountered
  • Low mitigation latency

3) Suitable For

  • Frontend Sites
  • APIs
  • Web3 Projects
  • E-commerce Landing Pages
  • High-Risk Services
  • Services prone to scanning/attacks

The Bottom Line: Tested as the most stable for Asia performance, non-ID registration, fast setup. Especially good for sites prone to attacks.cdn-no-realname-registration-guide (2)

6. Real Differences Between Non-ID CDNs (The Practical Summary)

This table makes the comparison clearer:

CDNNon-ID?Asia SpeedProtectionFree TierEase of Use
Cloudflare✔ Fully Non-IDMediumWeak (Free)GenerousEasy
BunnyFastWeakLimitedEasy
GcoreMediumWeakAvailableEasy
FastlyMediumWeakAvailableHarder
CDN07FastestStrongTrial AvailableEasy

7. What Types of Projects are Non-ID CDNs Good For?

✔ 1) New Website Owners

Cloudflare / Bunny

✔ 2) Blogs / Small Sites

Cloudflare / Bunny / jsDelivr

✔ 3) Image Hosting / Static Assets

Bunny / Gcore

✔ 4) International / Cross-Border Traffic

CDN07 / Cloudflare

✔ 5) APIs / Interfaces / Login Services

CDN07 (Stable + Protected)

✔ 6) Attack-Prone Services

Cloudflare (Paid) / CDN07 / Akamai

8. Final Advice: "Non-ID" Isn't the Main Point; "Actually Works" Is

Non-ID registration is just a feature of "sign-up convenience."

What really determines if you can use it are things like:

  • Does node routing jump around erratically?
  • Are Hong Kong/Singapore nodes stable enough?
  • Does origin fetching take inefficient routes?
  • Is the protection just marketing copy, or does it actually work?
  • Under attack, does it block your real users too?
  • Does China → Asia traffic fall apart during peak hours?

After over a decade of stepping into these pitfalls,

My criteria for choosing a CDN are now simple:

How stable it runs is far more important than how big its name is.

If you're just hosting static pages, Cloudflare's free tier is enough.

If you're running a real business, especially targeting Asia, I suggest not starting with a free tier—

A trial plan often runs much more stably than a free CDN.cdn-no-realname-registration-guide (1)

FAQ:

FAQ 1: Which international CDNs support non-ID registration?

Most international CDNs like Cloudflare, Bunny CDN, Gcore, Fastly, and CDN07 support registration without ID verification. You only need an email to sign up, with no requirement to upload an ID or business license.

These services typically feature "fast registration and short setup," ideal for websites that need to go live quickly.

FAQ 2: Does a non-ID CDN affect stability or security?

No. The non-ID policy only relates to the account system and has no bearing on performance or node quality. What actually affects stability are factors like node distribution, Anycast architecture, mitigation capacity, and routing strategy.

Providers like Cloudflare, Bunny, and CDN07 achieve high stability without lowering security standards due to their non-ID policy.

FAQ 3: Can non-ID CDNs be used in production?

Yes, but it depends on the project type. They are perfectly fine for static sites, blogs, and small tools.

However, for APIs, interfaces, payment-related services, marketing landing pages, or websites prone to attacks, it's advisable to choose a CDN with strong DDoS protection and stable Asian nodes, like CDN07 or Cloudflare's paid plans.

FAQ 4: Is the setup process for non-ID CDNs complicated?

Most international CDNs have a simple process, generally requiring just:
1) Register with an email
2) Create a site/zone
3) Set the origin IP/domain
4) Enable HTTPS
5) Change your DNS to their provided CNAME
The entire process usually takes 3-5 minutes to go live, with no manual approval needed.

FAQ 5: What are the limitations of non-ID CDNs?

The main limitations include:

  • No high-grade DDoS protection on free tiers
  • Bandwidth or node limitations
  • Large-scale attacks easily trigger risk controls
  • Unstable speeds in certain regions
  • Commercial needs often require a paid upgrade

If your website has stability requirements, I recommend choosing at least a professional CDN with a trial plan (like CDN07).

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