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Is Trade Reclaim safe? A look at the security model behind the crypto cashback platform

Published by
Sara K

Is Trade Reclaim safe to use? An honest look at what the platform can and cannot do with a linked account, and why the answer comes down to the public UID it runs on.

Before linking any account to a new cashback service, a trader should ask one blunt question: what can this thing actually do with my account? With Trade Reclaim, that question is easy to answer, because the platform is built to ask for almost nothing.

What access you are actually handing over

Third-party trading tools vary wildly in what they want from you. Some ask for an API key that can place trades or move money. A few still ask for a password, which is a hard no. Others read a single public value and leave it there. Trade Reclaim is firmly in the last group. To enrol an account it needs only the exchange UID, the public identifier that sits on a trader’s profile and that anyone can see. It uses that UID to match the trading volume the exchange already reports in its affiliate dashboard, and that is the whole job. There is no deeper hook into the account.

Why working from a public UID changes the risk

Since the platform never holds funds and never gets account access, the damage from a worst case is capped before it starts. Picture the platform being hacked tomorrow. An attacker still could not open a position, drain a balance, or send a withdrawal, because none of those permissions were ever granted. The trader’s money sits in their own exchange account the whole way through. That gap is built into how the system works rather than promised in a policy, and Trade Reclaim publishes its own breakdown of exactly what the UID does and does not expose.

Where the cashback comes from

The cashback is not a subsidy. It is the exchange’s affiliate commission, handed back. Exchanges pay commissions to partners who send them volume, and once an account is tied to the platform, the exchange pays it a cut of the fees that account runs up. Trade Reclaim keeps a small part and returns most of it, between 30 and 50% of the fees, paid in USDT. It runs across 10 exchanges including Bybit, Binance, OKX, Bitget and MEXC, and payouts land in a wallet the trader controls.

Linking an account, step by step

  1. Open the exchange through the platform’s affiliate link, or connect an existing account where the exchange permits it.
  2. Copy the public UID from the exchange profile.
  3. Paste it into Trade Reclaim to tie the account.
  4. Keep trading as normal, same exchange, same login, same bots.
  5. Let the cashback build up and withdraw it in USDT when you want.

Nowhere in that flow does anyone ask for a password or a key that can spend money.

How to check rather than take it on faith

The sound habit with any cashback tool is to confirm the claims instead of assuming them, and here that is doable. A trader can find their own account listed under the referrals in the exchange’s affiliate dashboard, watch the cashback arrive in USDT to a wallet they hold, and look up the referral codes published on each exchange page. The company details sit on the platform’s legal page, and the model has already been written up by independent crypto media. The warning signs to watch on any service in this space stay the same: a request for your password, or for an API key that carries trading or withdrawal rights. Trade Reclaim asks for neither.

The verdict

Trade Reclaim is a young brand, and that on its own is reason enough to check before trusting it. What stands out is that its safety does not lean on reputation. It leans on how little the platform can do: read a public UID, match volume, pay out. The account-access risk that makes some cashback tools genuinely dangerous is missing here, because that access is never asked for. Whether the cashback is worth the few minutes of setup depends on how much a trader moves, and that part is easy to test with the cashback calculator. The security question has the simpler answer: there is nothing in the account for the platform to lose.

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Sara K

Sara is steadily working on cryptocurrency evaluations, news, and fluctuations in digital currency prices. She is guest author associated with many cryptocurrencies admin and contributes as an active guide to readers about recent updates on virtual currencies.

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