Fast answer
Grid-bot signal checks prove whether the range, spacing, capital, fees, and stop rules were reviewable.
Before accepting a grid-bot signal result, record the configured price range, grid count, order spacing, capital assigned, fee tier, stop or shutdown rule, execution venue, and every filled and cancelled order.
If a provider posts a grid-bot profit screenshot without the original range, grid spacing, fee assumptions, and losing or cancelled orders, the proof is incomplete.
Grid checks
What to inspect in crypto grid bot signal records.
Range thesis
The record should explain why the price range was chosen, when it was configured, and what market condition would invalidate it.
Grid spacing
Order intervals, grid count, minimum notional size, and exchange tick rules affect whether the setup was actually executable.
Fee drag
High turnover can make fees and spread meaningful, so the record should include maker/taker assumptions and realized fees.
Shutdown rules
A reviewable grid signal shows stop, pause, rebalance, or manual override rules before the range breaks.
Source context
Grid trading automates orders across preset intervals inside a configured range.
Binance Academy describes grid trading as a bot that places orders at preset intervals within a configured price range, and Binance's trading-bot guide separates grid, DCA, arbitrage, rebalancing, and auto-invest tools. A grid-bot signal should therefore be reviewed as a configured automation record, not as proof that a trader predicted every move.
Review standard
A reviewable grid-bot signal connects setup parameters to order history.
For CSR evidence review, grid-bot records should include range, grid spacing, capital, leverage if any, fees, exchange, start time, stop or shutdown logic, filled orders, cancelled orders, manual changes, and final result.