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How to verify exchange proof of reserves? (Solvency Check)

Proof of Reserves cryptographically verifies an exchange’s on-chain asset holdings—but not full solvency—requiring users to independently validate addresses, signatures, and liabilities against blockchain data.

Feb 22, 2026 at 10:19 am

Understanding Proof of Reserves

1. Proof of Reserves is a cryptographic audit method used by cryptocurrency exchanges to demonstrate that they hold sufficient on-chain assets to cover all user deposits.

2. It relies on public blockchain data, where exchanges publish wallet addresses containing client funds and provide signed attestations confirming ownership and balance.

3. The process does not prove solvency in full—only that specific wallets contain certain balances at a point in time.

4. Users must independently verify the published addresses, confirm signatures using the exchange’s known public key, and reconcile balances against reported liabilities.

5. A successful verification requires matching the sum of verified on-chain balances with the exchange’s published liability figures for each asset.

Key Components of a Valid Solvency Check

1. A complete list of custodial wallet addresses per asset, published transparently and immutably—often via on-chain transactions or signed messages.

2. A cryptographically signed statement from the exchange, timestamped and verifiable with its publicly disclosed signing key.

3. A detailed liability report broken down by asset, including total user balances, segregated cold/warm storage allocations, and any excluded categories (e.g., institutional accounts).

4. A Merkle tree or similar structure linking individual user balances to aggregate reserves, enabling privacy-preserving inclusion proofs without exposing personal data.

5. Third-party attestation or real-time dashboards that allow independent observers to monitor changes between audits.

Common Pitfalls in Verification

1. Using outdated or unverified public keys—attackers have impersonated exchanges by publishing fake signatures with stolen or guessed keys.

2. Accepting aggregated wallet balances without checking for double-counting across multiple addresses or overlapping custody arrangements.

3. Overlooking liabilities denominated in stablecoins pegged to fiat, where reserve composition (cash vs. treasuries vs. commercial paper) remains opaque even if token balances match.

4. Assuming proof of reserves implies proof of liabilities—exchanges may omit certain debt instruments, margin positions, or synthetic exposures from their reported obligations.

5. Relying solely on screenshots or PDF reports instead of raw blockchain data and cryptographic verification tools.

Tools and Methods for Independent Validation

1. Blockchain explorers like Etherscan or Blockchair to query transaction history and current balances of published Ethereum or Bitcoin addresses.

2. Open-source scripts such as reserve-verifier that automate signature validation and Merkle root reconciliation against user deposit snapshots.

3. On-chain analytics platforms like Nansen or Arkham Intelligence to detect abnormal fund movements before or after an audit snapshot.

4. Manual verification using openssl or ethsign CLI tools to validate ECDSA signatures against the exchange’s documented public key.

5. Cross-referencing reserve ratios across multiple reporting periods to identify inconsistencies in growth patterns relative to trading volume or deposit inflows.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Does proof of reserves guarantee that my funds are safe from insolvency?No. It confirms asset holdings at a moment in time but does not reflect operational risk, counterparty exposure, or off-chain liabilities.

Q: Can an exchange fake a proof of reserves?Yes. An exchange could publish valid signatures and real wallet balances while hiding liabilities, misrepresenting ownership, or omitting pledged collateral.

Q: Why do some exchanges refuse to publish Merkle trees?Without Merkle trees, users cannot cryptographically prove their individual deposits are included in the aggregate reserve figure—leaving room for cherry-picked address selection.

Q: Is a third-party audit equivalent to proof of reserves?No. Traditional financial audits rely on internal records and sampling; proof of reserves uses verifiable on-chain data accessible to anyone without intermediary trust.

Disclaimer:info@kdj.com

The information provided is not trading advice. kdj.com does not assume any responsibility for any investments made based on the information provided in this article. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and it is highly recommended that you invest with caution after thorough research!

If you believe that the content used on this website infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately (info@kdj.com) and we will delete it promptly.

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