// Halo
Use Kimi (Moonshot) without a subscription — Kimi K2 on Halo
Moonshot's Kimi — long-context, strong at reasoning and code — served peer-to-peer on Halo. No account, no subscription. Pay only per prompt.
Kimi is Moonshot AI’s model — known for a very long context window and strong reasoning, and a favourite for working across big documents and codebases. Like most Chinese models, the friction is access: an account, regional limits, and questions about where your prompts go.
Halo removes that. Independent operators serve Kimi (alongside 140+ other models) and you reach them directly — no account, no subscription, no phone number.
No subscription — pay per prompt
Top up a wallet once and pay per prompt in USDC on Base. No monthly plan, nothing to cancel; you only pay for what you use.
Reachable from anywhere
There’s no central app to geo-block, so you can use Kimi wherever an operator can serve it — no region lock, no “not available in your country.”
Private by default, verifiable by design
Your prompt is encrypted to the operator, and confidential mode hides it even from the operator inside a hardware enclave (TEE). Every response carries a statistical proof that the real Kimi model produced it.
Ready to try it? Open the app and send a prompt, or read how to use Halo on the web. Prefer another Chinese model? DeepSeek and Qwen are on the network too.
Frequently asked questions
Is Kimi free on Halo?
No — but there's no subscription and no monthly fee. You pay per prompt in USDC on Base, so you only pay for what you use. No account, no card, no phone number. And because independent operators compete for every request, prices are often among the lowest you'll find for that model anywhere.
Do I need a Moonshot / Kimi account?
No. On Halo you connect a wallet and send a prompt — there's no signup with Moonshot or any China-hosted app, and your prompt isn't tied to a personal account.
Which Kimi models can I use?
Operators on the network serve the Kimi K2 line, including K2.5 and K2.6, with a code-focused variant too. Availability shifts as operators come online.
Is it private?
Your prompt is encrypted to the operator, and confidential mode can hide it even from the operator inside a hardware enclave (TEE). Every result carries a proof the real model produced it.