Which part specifically is worth it? The part where you risk identity theft and having your documents sold on the black market by completing KYC? Or the part where you lose all security by depositing your money to a centralized exchange? Or maybe the part where you have zero privacy as the exchange monitors your deposits, withdrawals, and transactions, and shares/sells that information with/to a bunch of third parties? Or maybe you mean the part where you lose all sovereignty over your money and allow a faceless stranger somewhere in the world to decide whether or not you are allowed to access your money? Or maybe the frankly ridiculous fees of tens or even hundreds of thousands of sats they charge you for all this?
An honest review of OP will show that he is not concerned about the crucial points you listed above. His only notable interest is how to evade tax imposed by his government. Meanwhile, he has already completed KYC with binance and maybe some other platforms.
...but it is better to start with amounts less than 1,000 until you master enough experience.
Very good advice. Whenever I want to use p2p, I always check the reputation of the other party, number and volume of transactions.
A transaction with a new user with high volume does not always end well, especially in countries where government uses p2p agents to track citizens into cryptocurrencies.