Paste a wallet address, give it a name, and KreoPoly pings you on Telegram whenever that wallet trades on Polymarket or Kalshi. No dashboards to check, no refreshing a page.
Every trade on Polymarket and Kalshi is a blockchain transaction. KreoPoly monitors the chain in real time. When a wallet you're watching submits a transaction, you get a Telegram message within seconds.
The alert includes the market name, which outcome they bought or sold, the price, and the size. Enough to decide whether to act on it yourself or let it pass.
You can track EVM addresses for Polymarket and Solana addresses for Kalshi. Both come through the same bot, same chat.
You can already look up any wallet's history on-chain. The problem is that doing it manually means constantly checking block explorers, refreshing pages, and trying to connect the activity to markets you recognize.
The tracker collapses all of that into one Telegram message. You keep your context, you stay informed, and you don't need to babysit anything.
It's also useful before setting up copy trading. Track a wallet for a week or two to see how it actually behaves before you commit funds to mirroring it automatically.
Alerts fire within seconds of the on-chain transaction. You're not getting a delayed summary — you're seeing the trade as it happens.
Give each wallet a name you'll recognize. "WhaleAlpha", "CryptoDesk", "Dad's account" — the label shows up in every alert so you always know whose trade it is.
Track wallets on both platforms simultaneously. Polymarket uses EVM addresses, Kalshi uses Solana addresses. Both work in the same bot.
Add as many wallets as you want. Use /track list to see all active tracking and manage them.
You see the actual market name, not just a contract address. No need to go look up what the trade was about — it's in the message.
If you decide a wallet is worth following automatically, switching to copy trading takes one command. You don't have to re-enter the address.
Search for @KreoPolyBot on Telegram or click the link below. Send /start if this is your first time.
t.me/KreoPolyBot
Get the wallet address you want to follow. For Polymarket wallets, copy their EVM address from the leaderboard or market page. For Kalshi, use the Solana address.
Send the /track command with the address and a label. The label is just for you — use whatever name makes sense.
/track [address] [label]
That's it. The next time that wallet places a trade, you'll get a message. No setup beyond that.
Start tracking a wallet. The label is optional but strongly recommended — it's how you'll identify the wallet in alerts. Works for both EVM and Solana addresses.
Shows all wallets you're currently tracking with their labels, addresses, and which platform each one is on.
Stop tracking a wallet by its label. Alerts for that wallet will stop immediately. The wallet itself is not affected in any way.
Temporarily pause alerts for a specific wallet without removing it. Useful if you need a break but want to keep the tracking configuration for later.
This is the real question, and there's no perfect answer. But there are patterns that separate wallets worth watching from ones that will just generate noise.
Consistency over a sample size matters more than any single win. A wallet that's up 8x is interesting, but if that's based on two lucky trades from six months ago, the signal is weak. Look for wallets with steady activity over at least 2 to 3 months with a win rate above 55% across dozens of markets.
Position sizing relative to conviction is another sign. Traders who vary their size based on how confident they seem — larger on markets they likely have edge in, smaller elsewhere — tend to be more disciplined than those who bet the same amount on everything.
How to find wallets to track: Polymarket's leaderboard shows the top traders by volume and profit. You can also look at any market you're interested in and see which wallets are holding large positions on each side. Kalshi doesn't have a public leaderboard, but top market makers are visible on highly liquid markets.
Avoid wallets that seem to trade everything. If someone is active in 50+ markets across completely unrelated categories all at once, they're probably using some kind of automated strategy or spraying bets rather than applying actual knowledge. Their win rate might look decent, but the trades aren't coming from real information advantage.
Also watch out for wallets that made all their money in one or two big events. These can be lucky, not skilled. A trader who went heavy on a specific election outcome and happened to win is not the same as one who's consistently extracting value across many different markets.
The most useful workflow is to track first and copy later. Set up tracking on three or four wallets you're curious about. Watch their activity for a couple of weeks without committing any money. Look at which markets they're trading, how their sizing works, whether they take profits or let things ride, how they handle markets going against them.
Once you've seen enough to have an opinion, you can either keep tracking manually or switch one of them to automatic copy trading. You'll go into copy trading with much better information about what to expect.
The practical difference is speed. Tracking tells you what happened; copy trading acts on it. If a whale buys a 30-cent position and it moves to 40 cents in the first few hours, manually copying after seeing the alert means you missed the entry. Copy trading catches it as it happens.
That said, tracking has its uses even if you're eventually going to copy. Some markets are too thin to copy efficiently — a large order can move the price against you. On these markets, tracking lets you stay informed without the execution risk.
/track [address] [label] with the wallet's EVM address. You'll start receiving alerts from that point on.Open @KreoPolyBot, paste an address, and you're watching. It takes about 30 seconds.
Open @KreoPolyBot