Looking for a 3Commas or Cryptohopper Alternative? Read This First
3Commas and Cryptohopper are powerful bot-building platforms. Ezath is a different animal — verifiable signals with optional execution. Here's an honest look at which one you actually want.

If you're searching for a "3Commas alternative" or a "Cryptohopper alternative," it's worth being honest about what you're actually looking for — because the answer changes the recommendation. There are two very different itches hiding under that search, and Ezath only scratches one of them. This is a straight comparison, not a takedown.
What 3Commas and Cryptohopper actually are
Both are mature, capable bot-building platforms. They've been around since roughly 2017, they connect to many exchanges via API keys, and they give you a toolbox: DCA bots, grid bots, paper trading, backtesting, and a marketplace where third parties sell signals and pre-built strategies you can copy. If you enjoy designing and tuning your own automated strategies, they're genuinely good at that, and Ezath is not trying to replace that experience.
So credit where it's due: as strategy construction kits, they do a lot Ezath deliberately doesn't.
Where the platform model leaves traders frustrated
The complaints that send people searching for an alternative tend to be structural, not bugs:
- You have to design the strategy yourself. Grid spacing, DCA safety-order ladders, take-profit logic — it's a deep rabbit hole, and a mistuned bot loses money confidently. The platform hands you the tools; the edge is on you to build.
- The signal marketplaces have the same trust problem as Telegram groups. When performance comes from a third-party seller's self-reported stats, you're back to "trust me" — exactly the thing a verifiable record is supposed to fix. (More on that in Can Crypto Signals Be Audited?.)
- DCA-into-losers can blow up in a real trend. Averaging down looks brilliant in a range and catastrophic when a coin keeps falling. That's a property of the strategy, not a knock on the platform — but it's where a lot of unattended bots die.
A straight comparison
| Feature | 3Commas | Cryptohopper | Ezath |
|---|---|---|---|
| Core model | DCA & grid bot builder | Bot builder + strategy marketplace | Signal engine + optional executor |
| Who designs the strategy | You | You, or copy a seller | Ezath's algorithm |
| Public, verifiable record | Self-reported, per seller | Self-reported, per seller | Yes — hash-chained, public |
| Strategy style | DCA, grid, custom | DCA, grid, copy, custom | Trend/range-aware (R-regime) |
| Coins | Hundreds | Hundreds | Focused: BTC, ETH, SOL |
| Exchange link | API keys, many | API keys, many | Trade-only keys (Binance, Bybit, OKX, Gate) |
| Best for | Hands-on bot builders | Builders + copiers | Want verified calls, minimal setup |
So which "alternative" do you actually want?
- If you love building and tuning bots — designing grids, laddering DCA orders, backtesting your own ideas across hundreds of coins — then honestly, Ezath is not your tool. Stay with a platform built for that. We'd be a downgrade for you.
- If you're tired of being your own quant — if what you actually want is a small set of high-quality calls you can verify, with execution that's optional and hands-off — that's the itch Ezath is built for.
The difference isn't "more features." It's who carries the strategy risk and whether you can check the results. On a bot platform, you design the strategy and you trust the marketplace's numbers. With Ezath, the strategy is ours and the track record is public.
What makes Ezath the different option
Every BTC, ETH and SOL signal is hash-chained before the outcome is known and logged — win, loss or WAIT — to a public track record you can audit yourself, resolved against live Binance candles. There's no marketplace of anonymous sellers; there's one engine and one record. If you want automation, the Auto-Trader executes those exact signals on your own exchange account using trade-only API keys (it can't withdraw), with defined exits instead of a grid you have to babysit. You don't tune anything — you connect, pick your coins, and the engine does the rest.
If you've read the marketing on every bot platform and what you really wanted was proof, start with the free plan (no card) and audit a few live calls before you trust any of us. For the deeper trade-off, see Trading Bots vs Signal Services: What the Math Actually Says and Best Crypto Signals With a Public Track Record.
