Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
DealFied is a Bitcoin escrow platform for remote services, digital delivery, and peer-to-peer agreements. It is neither a traditional exchange nor a DeFi protocol. Its core purpose is to let buyers and sellers complete a BTC escrow transaction through invitation, acceptance, fund locking, delivery, release, or dispute handling. The platform emphasizes “designated counterparties” rather than anonymous payments, making it more suitable for remote collaborations that require an audit trail and process controls.
Based on the available content, DealFied explicitly supports only BTC. Each account is assigned a dedicated BTC deposit wallet. After deposit, funds are credited to the account balance and can be kept there, allocated to an escrow transaction, or withdrawn to a target address. The escrow workflow includes buyer invitation, seller acceptance, fund locking, delivery completion, buyer release, refund, or dispute escalation. Partial releases, full releases, and dispute actions are attached to the same escrow record. On the security side, registration, password recovery, withdrawal verification, and email changes use OTP. However, there is no disclosure of cold wallets, insurance, proof of reserves, or multisig mechanisms.
Fee information is the main missing piece. The available content does not explain escrow fees, withdrawal fees, who pays network miner fees, or whether dispute handling fees apply. Users should confirm these details before using the platform for large transactions. In terms of KYC, the platform clearly states that no identity verification is required to open an account or use the escrow workflow, which lowers the entry barrier. However, this also means its compliance coverage, anti-fraud capability, and long-term viability for high-value transactions should be assessed carefully. Information such as company location, licenses, or regulatory registration is not provided in the available content.
The main advantage is a clear workflow: the buyer can cancel before the seller accepts, but after acceptance the transaction must proceed through completion, release, or dispute. This reduces the uncertainty of “pay first, argue later.” Dispute records, reasons, and chat history are kept in one place, making it easier for an administrator to make a decision. The downsides are single-asset support, no fee disclosure, no fiat on/off-ramp, no regulatory information, and only basic security explanations. DealFied is better suited to BTC-settled scenarios such as freelancing, design and development delivery, agency services, domain transfers, or handover of digital access rights.
The available content does not provide information on access from mainland China, payment channels, or local compliance, so china_access can only be rated as unknown. Since the platform does not disclose any fiat channels, Chinese users—even if they can access it—would need to handle BTC sourcing, network availability, and compliance risks on their own. If you need more complete customer support, fiat deposits, multi-asset support, or regulatory disclosure, consider comparing it with mainstream cryptocurrency platforms, freelance platforms with escrow features, or third-party escrow services with clearly defined arbitration rules.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on dealfied.com official site.
dealfied.com is an Unknown Crypto provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach dealfied.com directly.