No. Tradiso is not a scam. We'd rather answer the question head-on with evidence than dodge it. The evidence is below — verifiable, public, and not something we control.
Anyone evaluating a product in this category should ask "is this a scam?" The industry has a long history of bad actors, and skepticism is healthy. We respect the question. Here's our direct answer with the evidence attached.
Scams hide their founders. We don't. Our team is named, public, reachable. Speaking to a real person on our team takes one email. Founders appear on podcasts and sign written client agreements.
Scams curate their reviews and avoid third-party review platforms. We maintain a public Trustpilot profile with 75+ verified reviews. We cannot remove or edit reviews. 95% are five-star — and the small percentage that aren't are still visible to anyone who looks.
Scams rush you into paying before you can read terms. We send a written client agreement before any payment. Refund terms, deliverables, and obligations are explicit. Take all the time you need to read it.
Scams show performance only on internal dashboards. We publish our track record on third-party platforms we don't control. Any prospective client can audit it.
Scams make money easy to deposit and hard to withdraw. Withdrawals are the single most-mentioned positive topic across our 75+ Trustpilot reviews. Clients describe straightforward, on-time withdrawal experiences across funding methods and geographies.
Here's a checklist of things scam operations refuse to do because doing them would expose them:
We do all five — by design. We've built the operation around being verifiable.
If you're still uncertain, do the due diligence we encourage. Read the Trustpilot reviews. Read the agreement. Talk to our team. Then decide. We'd rather you decline after honest evaluation than commit without it.