Skip to main content
HomeSolutionsCrypto Signal Copier
Crypto hub · Binance Futures + Bybit

Crypto signal copier — automate signals on Binance Futures and Bybit

A crypto signal copier is software that reads trading signals — from Telegram, Discord or TradingView alerts — and places the matching orders on your crypto exchange automatically. PipSync does this in the cloud for Binance Futures and Bybit, using trade-only API keys and server-side risk rules.

Start free — no credit cardSee pricing

Risk warning: CFDs are complex instruments with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 70–80% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs. Risk disclosure · Past performance.

Crypto markets trade around the clock, so a copier that depends on your computer or a hosted bot is fragile by design. PipSync ingests, parses and routes signals entirely on its own servers: the exchange connection uses your API key with trading permission only — never withdrawal permission — and your sizing rules are applied before any order reaches Binance or Bybit. Both exchange integrations are live in PipSync's public beta.

Crypto signal copying at a glance

Signal sourcesTelegram, Discord, TradingView webhook alerts, custom JSON webhooks
Crypto destinationsBinance Futures and Bybit — both live in PipSync's public beta
Binance contract typesUSD-M and COIN-M futures, with post-only and reduce-only order flags
Bybit account modelDerivatives trading with unified-margin account support
API key permissionsTrading permission only — withdrawal permission is never required or requested
Risk controlsServer-side position sizing, SL/TP mapping, max open trades, symbol filters
PriceFree plan available (€0); paid plans from €49/month

How do I start copying crypto signals?

Every crypto route follows the same pattern: pick a signal source, connect an exchange with a restricted API key, set risk rules, then test.

  1. Create a free PipSync account

    Sign up at app.pipsync.io — no credit card needed. The free plan covers connecting a signal source and an exchange, so you can watch real crypto signals parse before paying anything.

  2. Connect a signal source

    Add the Telegram channel or Discord server you follow, or create a webhook endpoint for TradingView alerts. PipSync's AI parser reads free-text signals; TradingView alerts can also send structured JSON.

  3. Add your exchange with a trade-only API key

    On Binance or Bybit, generate an API key with trading permission only — leave withdrawal permission off — and add it in the PipSync dashboard. Use the exchange's IP allowlist if it offers one.

  4. Set risk rules and test

    Configure position sizing, SL/TP handling, max open trades and symbol filters per route. Start with small sizes and watch a few signals execute exactly as expected before scaling anything up.

What is a crypto signal copier?

A crypto signal copier is execution software that sits between a signal source and your exchange account: it reads each incoming signal, extracts the symbol, direction, entry and stop/target levels, applies your own sizing rules, and submits the order through the exchange's API. The signal still comes from a channel or strategy you chose — the copier only automates the execution step you would otherwise do by hand.

This is different from the copy-trading features built into exchanges, which tie you to traders publishing on that one platform. A signal copier works with sources you already follow — a private Telegram group, a Discord server, your own TradingView strategy — and routes them to whichever connected exchange account you decide. PipSync is exactly this kind of tool: it executes signals but does not produce, sell or recommend any.

Why do 24/7 crypto markets make manual signal copying impractical?

Because crypto never closes. Forex traders at least get weekends off; perpetual futures on Binance and Bybit trade every hour of every day, and signal providers post accordingly — entries at 3 a.m., stop adjustments on Sunday afternoon. Copying by hand means either missing those messages or never really being offline.

It also means a copier that runs on your own machine, a rented VPS or a self-hosted bot script has a permanent uptime problem: one reboot, disconnect or crashed process during a fast move and the trade is missed or, worse, left unmanaged. PipSync removes that failure mode by running the entire pipeline — ingestion, parsing, risk checks, order routing — on its own servers, so nothing depends on hardware you have to babysit.

How should I set up exchange API keys for a signal copier?

Create a key with the minimum permissions that trading requires, and nothing more. PipSync only needs trading permission on Binance and Bybit; it never asks for withdrawal permission, so even in a worst-case scenario a key cannot be used to move funds off the exchange. Your exchange remains the custodian of your money — PipSync holds API keys, not funds.

On the PipSync side, API keys are stored with app-managed encryption and are never exposed in logs. You stay in control of the connection: revoking or rotating the key on the exchange cuts access immediately, with no support ticket needed.

  • Enable trading permission only — leave withdrawal permission disabled
  • Use the exchange's IP allowlist feature where available
  • Create a dedicated key per tool, so revoking one does not break another
  • Rotate or revoke keys on the exchange any time you want to cut access

What about leverage and liquidation risk?

A signal copier does not change the risk profile of leveraged perpetual futures — it only changes who clicks the button. Liquidation works the same whether an order was placed by you or by automation: if a leveraged position moves far enough against you, the exchange closes it. No copier, PipSync included, can remove that risk, and you should treat any tool that suggests otherwise with suspicion.

What automation can do is enforce discipline before the order exists. PipSync applies your rules server-side: position sizing (fixed or percent-risk), stop-loss and take-profit mapping, a cap on open trades, and symbol filters that block instruments you never want traded. A malformed or oversized signal cannot bypass these limits, because they are checked before the order is sent to the exchange. Review your margin mode and leverage settings on the exchange itself before enabling any route, and start with sizes you can afford to be wrong with.

Which crypto exchanges does PipSync support?

Two exchanges are live in PipSync's public beta: Binance Futures and Bybit. Binance Futures covers USD-M and COIN-M contracts and supports post-only and reduce-only order flags, which matter for traders who manage maker fees or want exits that can never accidentally increase a position. Bybit is connected for derivatives trading and works with its unified-margin account model.

Both integrations connect through the exchanges' REST and WebSocket APIs — there is no browser plugin, bot script or third-party bridge involved. The same PipSync account can also route signals to MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader and Match-Trader, so a mixed crypto-and-forex setup lives in one dashboard. Additional destinations are listed on the brokers page as they progress through beta.

Can I send one crypto signal to multiple exchanges or accounts?

Yes. Routes in PipSync are source-to-destination pairs, so a single Telegram channel or TradingView alert can feed a Binance Futures account and a Bybit account at the same time, each with its own risk rules. That is useful when you split capital across exchanges or want different sizing on each venue.

Because risk rules are attached per route rather than per signal, the same message can open a small position on one account and a larger one on another — or be filtered out entirely on an account whose symbol list excludes it.

Try it on the free plan

Connect a signal source and a broker account, watch PipSync parse and route in real time, and upgrade only if you need more. No credit card required to start.

Start free — no credit cardSee pricing

Risk warning: CFDs are complex instruments with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 70–80% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs. Risk disclosure · Past performance.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Does a crypto signal copier need withdrawal permission on my API key?

No, and you should refuse any tool that asks for it. PipSync only needs an API key with trading permission; withdrawal permission stays disabled, so the key can place and manage orders but can never move funds off the exchange. Your exchange remains the custodian of your money.

Written by the PipSync team · Reviewed by Tobias Russmann, Director, PipSync · Published · Last updated

PipSync is a cloud-based signal automation platform that routes trading signals from Telegram, Discord, TradingView alerts and custom webhooks to broker accounts on MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, Match-Trader, Binance Futures and Bybit — with server-side risk management and no VPS required. PipSync is an execution tool, not a signal provider and not investment advice.

PipSync is a signal execution tool. It does not provide trading signals, does not guarantee any trading results and is not investment advice. Trading leveraged products involves substantial risk of loss. See the full risk disclosure and performance disclaimer.