Kreo vs Betmoar (2026): which one wins?

Both tools last verified · methodology · changelog

A copy-trading bot against a free manual terminal: Kreo automates entries, exits, and mirroring across both Polymarket and Kalshi for a curve-based fee, while Betmoar charges nothing, touches nothing — your funds stay in Polymarket's contracts — and backs it with the most verifiable volume record in our comparison. Which wins depends entirely on whether you automate.

Capability by capability

Capability Kreo Betmoar
Copy trading Yes

Tracks top Polymarket and Kalshi wallets on-chain and mirrors their entries and exits under user sizing rules.

No

Manual terminal only — no copy trading anywhere in vendor materials, confirmed by third-party testing.

Copy filters & sizing controls Yes

Fixed-amount or percent-of-balance sizing, daily loss limits, per-market caps, and 13 market-category filters (e.g. skip Sports). Less granular than PolyBot's per-outcome and odds-range controls.

No

Not applicable — no copy engine.

Analytics on followed wallets Partial

Performance analytics and a top-trader leaderboard are advertised; per-wallet PnL/hit-rate depth is not documented.

No

Standalone whale/wallet analytics exist but aren't tied to any copy system.

Strategy automation Partial

Limit orders with expirations and an auto-trade mode for 5m/15m crypto markets; no general strategy builder documented.

Unknown

No rule-based entries documented; third-party review found no automation of trade decisions.

Take-profit / stop-loss / trailing Yes

Take-profit, stop-loss, and trailing stop-losses advertised per trade.

Unknown

No TP/SL/trailing documented; third-party review noted no stop-loss automation.

Auto-claim resolved positions Unknown

Auto-redemption of resolved positions is not documented in the sources we reviewed.

Unknown

Not documented.

In-group Telegram trading Unknown

No in-group trading or group discovery features documented.

Partial

Discord-native rather than Telegram: order placement, market browsing, and notifications inside Discord servers, with a claimed 100+ partner servers.

Cross-chain deposits Yes

Bridged deposits with $2–$7 minimums depending on chain; funds held as USDC.e on Polygon.

Unknown

No deposit handling — you trade from your existing Polymarket wallet.

Wallet discovery & leaderboards Yes

In-product leaderboard of top traders to follow.

Yes

Whale tracking, top-holders analysis, position deltas, and profit analysis distinguishing winners from wash traders.

Platform surface Yes

Telegram bot plus a web app; no Telegram Mini App documented. Docs describe the bot as Telegram-only with the web surface as a separate terminal.

Yes

Web trading terminal, Discord bot, a news terminal streaming X/Truth Social feeds with text-to-speech alerts and one-click execution, and a UMA oracle dashboard.

Referral program Yes

Multi-tier: 30–35% level 1, 3% level 2, 2% level 3, plus 5–25% fee cashback by tier.

Unknown

No referral program found.

Editorial scores side by side

Dimension (weight) Kreo Betmoar
Security & Custody (20%) 8.5 8.5
Execution Speed (15%) 8.5 8.0
Configurability & Risk Controls (15%) 8.0 3.0
Feature Richness (15%) 8.5 6.0
Reliability & Uptime (10%) 8.0 9.0
Platform Surface & Mini App (10%) 8.5 7.5
Track Record & Reputation (10%) 7.5 8.5
Fees & Value (5%) 6.0 9.5
Weighted overall 8.2 7.2

Scores follow the published rubric; every dimension score has a written rationale on each tool's review page.

The case for the free terminal

Betmoar’s pitch survives scrutiny unusually well. The vendor claims zero platform fees on all features (third parties fairly note that spreads and Polymarket’s native costs remain). Custody barely exists as a question — you connect your existing wallet or Polymarket email account and funds never leave Polymarket’s smart contracts. And where most tools in this niche offer marketing claims, Betmoar offers a public ledger: second place among Polymarket’s official builders by 30-day volume — $184M across 659 active users at our capture, checked against the leaderboard API itself — plus a named operating company in Singapore and a footprint dating to mid-2024, the oldest in our comparison. Its analytics layer is genuinely useful for a discretionary trader: whale tracking with profit analysis that filters out wash traders, top-holders views, a news feed that turns X and Truth Social posts into spoken alerts with execution a click away, and an oracle dashboard for watching UMA resolutions.

What the bot buys you

Everything Betmoar deliberately omits is Kreo’s product. Kreo mirrors top wallets’ entries and exits under your sizing rules, with fixed or percent-of-balance sizing, a daily loss limit, market-level caps, and thirteen category filters; it advertises per-trade take-profit, stop-loss, and trailing protection, limit orders with expirations, and an auto-trade mode for 5-minute and 15-minute crypto markets. Betmoar has none of this — no copy engine, no automation of trade decisions, no documented protective exits — so its speed is ultimately your reaction time. Kreo’s costs are the flip side: the documented fee curve peaks around 1.75% at 50¢ odds, and premium subscription and performance fees exist without a public schedule.

Kalshi changes the calculus

The venue question can end the debate before fees enter it. Betmoar is Polymarket-only. Kreo covers Kalshi alongside Polymarket — unique among the major bots we verified — so a two-exchange trader comparing these tools isn’t really comparing them at all. Community surfaces differ too: Kreo lives in Telegram with a web app beside it; Betmoar is web-first, its community running through Discord across a claimed hundred-plus partner servers.

Picking your side

Manual Polymarket traders should pocket the fee savings and take Betmoar — it is the best terminal we verified and the easiest place to learn market mechanics. Traders who want automation, downside protection, or Kalshi need a bot, and between these two that means Kreo.

Key facts compared

Kreo

Trading fee 0.30% minimum, peaking around 1.75% at 50¢ odds (varies by odds) — max(0.3%, 7% × price × (1 − price))
Custody Self-custodial (Safe wallet)
Minimum deposit None for direct Polygon deposits; bridge minimums $2–$7 by chain
Minimum trade $1 per copied trade; $5 minimum for auto trade
Surfaces telegram, web
Markets polymarket, kalshi
Status active

Betmoar

Trading fee No fee advertised
Custody Connect your own wallet
Surfaces web
Markets polymarket
Polymarket Builders leaderboard #2 by monthly volume (snapshot 2026-07-15)
Status active

Frequently asked questions

Does Betmoar support Kalshi?

No — Betmoar is a Polymarket terminal, full stop. Kreo follows and mirrors wallets on Kalshi as well as Polymarket, the only major bot we verified with dual-venue coverage. For anyone active on both exchanges, that alone settles this matchup in Kreo's favor.

Is Betmoar safer than Kreo?

Betmoar asks you to trust less: you plug in the wallet you already use and your money never leaves Polymarket's Polygon contracts, with no evidence it generates or stores keys — billions in routed volume, no reported incidents. Kreo's custody is strong for a bot (Privy enclaves, Gnosis Safe, trade-only permissions, 2FA), but a bot inherently holds a trading wallet; Kreo's key-export path is also undocumented.

Why pay Kreo's fees when Betmoar is free?

Because Betmoar cannot act for you. It has no copy engine, no rule-based automation, and no documented stop-loss or take-profit — third-party testing confirms this. Kreo's curve, roughly 1.75% at 50¢ odds down to 0.3% at extremes, is the price of trades executing while you sleep, with protective exits attached.

Sources

  1. Kreo official landing — security (vendor) (enter.kreo.app, checked 2026-07-15)
  2. KreoPoly docs — fee shape (kreopoly.app, checked 2026-07-15)
  3. CoinCodeCap review (third-party) (coincodecap.com, checked 2026-07-15)
  4. KreoPoly homepage (vendor) (kreopoly.app, checked 2026-07-15)
  5. Betmoar terminal page — fees (vendor) (betmoar.fun, checked 2026-07-15)
  6. Predicts.guru review (third-party) (predicts.guru, checked 2026-07-15)
  7. Polymarket Academy comparison (third-party) (polymarketacademy.com, checked 2026-07-15)