Signals ยท The Free Group

Free Crypto Signals
That Show Their Work

Most free crypto signals are bait for a paid upsell, with no record of whether the calls ever worked. We run ours the opposite way. Every call is logged, timestamped, and public.

2,500+ wins posted by members, nearly all with screenshots.
A glowing crypto gem above a holographic trading chart

The short version. A free crypto signal is a heads-up that a trader thinks a coin is worth buying, posted at no cost. The problem is not the price. The problem is proof. Most free groups post a few wins, hide every loss, and use the whole thing to sell you a paid room. You never learn if the calls actually worked.

This page does three things. It shows you how real free signals work and what one should contain. It shows you how to verify any group's track record yourself, in a few minutes, before you trust a single call. And it shows you the logged, screenshot-backed record behind the Gem Hunters free group, so you can judge the proof instead of the adjectives. We run since 2017, with 40,000+ members and more than $20M in member profits posted along the way. The tagline is simple. No junk, just gems.

The Basics

How free crypto signals actually work

Strip away the hype and a signal is a simple thing. Here is what is really happening when one drops.

A crypto signal is one trader sharing a trade idea with a group. A trader or a research desk studies the market, finds a coin they think is set up to move, and posts the plan. In a free group that plan reaches you at no cost, usually through a chat channel or an alert. You read it, decide if you agree, and choose whether to act. The signal is the heads-up. The decision stays yours.

Behind a good signal there is real work. The desk watches price action across timeframes, reads the order flow and liquidity, checks the project, and waits for a setup it can name. Only then does it post. A bad signal skips all of that. Someone sees a coin already pumping, posts the ticker, and hopes you buy in time to push it higher. The plan and the reasoning are what separate the two, and that is what you are really shopping for.

The catch with free signals is the business behind them. A group has to pay for the research somehow. The honest model is a free tier that proves the method and a clearly separate paid tier for people who want more. The dishonest model uses the free calls as bait, pumps a coin the group already holds, and quietly deletes anything that loses. Same words on the tin, opposite intent. The way to tell them apart is the record, which is the rest of this page.

What You Get

Free means free, forever

The free group is the top of the funnel and it is genuinely useful on its own. You are never required to upgrade.

Daily updates

Market updates on BTC, ETH and altcoins from the research desk.

Select calls

Real gem calls posted with the reasoning behind them.

40,000+ members

The full community sharing entries, exits and wins.

A first look

See the method in action before you ever decide on Premium.

Here is the honest part. A free group has to make money somewhere, so most use the free calls as bait and quietly stop posting the ones that lose. We do the opposite. The free group is real on its own, and the paid tier is a clearly separate upgrade for people who want every call. You watch the method work first. You decide later. Nobody pushes you to pay, and there is no card required to join.

Read The Call

What a real crypto signal includes

A signal is not "buy this coin." A real one is a small plan you can act on and check later. Four parts, every time.

The four parts of a tradeable crypto signal, and why each one matters.
Part of the signalWhat it tells youWhy it matters
EntryThe price or zone where the trader is buying.Without it you chase the coin after the move and pay too much.
TargetThe price where the plan takes profit, often in stages.It sets the reward, so you know what you are playing for.
InvalidationThe level where the idea is wrong and you cut the loss.This is the part scams skip. No invalidation means no risk control.
TimestampThe exact time the call was posted.It lets the call be graded honestly later, win or lose.

The one most people miss is invalidation. A real trader tells you where the idea breaks before it breaks. A coin signal with an entry and a target but no exit for when it goes wrong is half a plan, and the half they left out is the half that protects your money. Stage the targets too. Taking some profit on the way up and moving your stop up behind it is how a winning call stays a winning call instead of turning into a round trip back to zero.

A signal is also tied to a timeframe. A swing entry that plays out over weeks is a different plan from a quick intraday scalp, even on the same coin. Good signals say which one they are. And every call should carry a timestamp, because a call you cannot timestamp is a call nobody can ever grade. That is the whole game. The timestamp is what turns a screenshot into evidence.

Spot calls and leverage calls also read differently. A spot call is simple. You buy the coin and you can only lose what you put in. A leverage call borrows to size up, so both the gains and the losses get multiplied, and a sharp move against the position can wipe it out fast. That is why our grading rule treats a leverage call as a win only when it hits its first take-profit. The bigger the risk a call carries, the more the entry, target and invalidation matter. A leverage signal with no invalidation is not a plan. It is a coin flip with borrowed money.

The Setups Behind A Call

How real free signals get built

A signal does not come from a feeling. It comes from a setup the trader can name. These are the common ones you will see behind real calls.

You do not need to master technical analysis to follow good signals, but it helps to know the patterns a trader is reacting to. A real desk waits for one of a handful of repeatable conditions, then posts the entry, target and invalidation around it. Here are the setups that drive most honest crypto calls, in plain English.

01

Oversold in Uptrend

A coin in a clear long-term uptrend dips hard and reads oversold on momentum. The trend is intact, the pullback is the discount, and the bounce is the play.

02

Pullback (1D) in Uptrend

On the daily chart, price pulls back to support inside an uptrend. A lower-risk re-entry, because you buy the dip instead of the top.

03

Pullback (1W) in Uptrend

The same idea on the weekly chart. A deeper, slower setup for swing traders who want a bigger move and can wait for it.

04

Early Bullish Momentum Inflection

Momentum is turning up from the bottom for the first time. An early signal, higher risk, with the chance to get in before the crowd notices.

05

Uptrend and Fresh Momentum Inflection

An existing uptrend gets a fresh kick of momentum. The trend confirms the direction and the inflection times the entry.

06

Uptrend & Bullish Momentum

Trend up, momentum up, both pointing the same way. The cleanest continuation setup, where you ride strength that is already in motion.

07

Strong Uptrend

Price is trending hard with little resistance overhead. The risk is buying late, so the entry and invalidation matter more than ever.

08

Short-Term Trend Upgrade

The short-term trend flips from neutral or down to up. An early warning that a quick move may be starting.

None of these is a magic button. They are conditions, not certainties, and any of them can fail. That is exactly why the invalidation level is part of the signal. The point of naming the setup is so you understand the why behind a call instead of blindly copying a ticker. When a call posts in the free group, the reasoning comes with it, so you learn to read the market for yourself instead of just chasing alerts.

Use It Well

What to do when you get a signal

A good signal is only half the job. How you act on it decides whether the win rate ever reaches your account.

01

Read the whole plan

Entry, target, invalidation, timeframe. If any part is missing, do not act until you know where the idea is wrong.

02

Check it yourself

Pull up the chart. Agree with the reasoning before you risk a dollar. A signal is research, not an order.

03

Size the position

Risk a small, fixed slice of your account per trade. One bad call should never be able to hurt you badly.

04

Set the invalidation first

Place the stop before you enter, not after the trade moves against you. Decide the loss while you are calm.

05

Take profit in stages

Sell some at the first target and move your stop up. Lock in the win instead of giving it all back.

06

Log your own result

Keep your own record of every trade. Over time it tells you the truth about what is working for you.

A 70.18% logged win rate belongs to the desk, not automatically to you. The gap between the two is execution. If you chase a coin after it has already run, skip the invalidation, or bet too big on one call, you can lose money even when the signal itself was right. Position sizing is the quiet skill that keeps you in the game. Risk a small fixed amount per trade, and a string of losers stays survivable instead of fatal.

Low-cap coins, the kind a gem group hunts, are the most volatile part of an already volatile market. The upside is real, and so is the chance a coin goes to zero. That is the trade you are choosing when you chase outsized gains. Treat every signal as research to pressure-test, not a button to press. The members who do best with the free group are the ones who learn the method, build their own discipline, and use the calls to sharpen their reads rather than outsource their thinking.

No Cherry-Picking

How the calls are logged

This is the part most groups skip. Every call goes into a database with its timestamp, and the grading rule is fixed in advance so nobody can move the goalposts after the fact.

A holographic phone showing a glowing crypto signal alert

By that rule, across 929 independently graded calls from April 2024 to November 2025, 652 were winners. A documented 70.18% win rate, with the small wins counted against it. A record of what happened, not a promise of what will. Past performance does not guarantee future returns.

Read the rule again and notice what it does. It counts breakeven and small gains as losses. Most groups would book a 3% scrape as a win to pad the number. We do not. The bar is set before the call is made, so the rule cannot bend to flatter the result after the fact. That is the difference between a win rate you can trust and a number someone made up. A logged call sits in the database whether it worked or not, and the losers stay on the record next to the winners.

The calls are graded independently against that rule, not by the person who made them. Over more than 370 livestreams the desk has broken down entries and exits in real time, and the full track record is public on the homepage. A 70.18% logged win rate is strong, but it is history, not a forecast. Plenty of those calls still lost. The honest claim is that the record is real and you can check it, not that the next call is guaranteed.

Do Your Own Check

How to verify any track record

Run this on any signal group before you trust a single call, ours included. It takes a few minutes and it filters out almost every fake.

01

Find the full history

Ask to see every call, not a highlight reel. If there is no timestamped log of past calls, there is nothing to verify, and that is your answer.

02

Check the timestamps

A real call is posted before the move, not screenshotted after. Look for entries dated ahead of the pump, not victory laps after the fact.

03

Count the losers

A record with no losing calls is fiction. Every honest trader has losers. If you cannot find any, the wins are cherry-picked.

04

Read the grading rule

Ask what counts as a win. If a 1% wiggle counts, the win rate means nothing. A fixed rule set in advance is the green flag.

05

Do the math yourself

Take the wins, divide by the total calls, and check it against the number they advertise. If you cannot recompute it, do not trust it.

06

Watch it live

The best test is time. Join the free side, watch new calls land in real time, and see if the record holds up before you ever pay.

Apply this to Gem Hunters and the numbers add up. Members have posted 2,500+ wins in the community, and almost all of them came with a screenshot attached. The graded report covers 929 calls and 652 winners, which is where the 70.18% comes from. You can take those two numbers, divide them, and get the same figure. That is the point of logging everything. You do not have to believe us. You can do the arithmetic.

Most groups fail at step one. There is no full history to even check, so the conversation ends there. A group that hands you the log and says "go count" is rare, and it is the strongest signal of all, stronger than any single win. The whole point of doing the check yourself is that you stop trusting strangers and start trusting math. Run these six steps once on any group and you will know in minutes whether you are looking at a real record or a sales pitch wearing a chart.

Two Ways In

Free versus Premium

Start free. Upgrade only if you want every call and the private lobbies.

A small gem and a large premium gem side by side
What is in the free group versus the Premium tier.
What you getFreePremium
Price$0 forever1 ETH / year
Daily market updatesYesYes
Select gem callsYesYes
The full community of 40,000+YesYes
Every call postedSelect onlyYes
The full alpha archiveNoYes
The private lobbiesNoYes
Card required to joinNo card neededPaid in crypto

The free group is not a crippled demo. It is genuinely useful on its own, and most members never upgrade. Premium exists for people who want every single call instead of the selected ones, plus the full archive and the private rooms. It is 1 ETH per year, paid in crypto on the website. The smart move is the same one we would tell a friend. Start free, watch the calls land, judge the record, and only pay if the proof earns it.

So what is the real difference between free and paid signals? With most groups, none worth paying for. The free side and the paid side run on the same empty promises, and the paywall just hides the same lack of a record. With an honest group the difference is volume and depth, not quality. The free calls and the paid calls come from the same desk and the same method. Free shows you a selection so you can judge the work. Paid hands you the full feed and the rooms where the calls get discussed in detail. The proof, the grading rule and the logged history are the same on both sides, because the record is the product. If a group's free tier is worthless, paying does not fix that. It just costs you to find out.

Buyer Beware

How to spot a fake signal group

Use this on any group before you trust a single call, including ours.

No public record

No timestamped history of past calls, win or lose.

Only winners shown

Losing calls quietly disappear and never get counted.

Guaranteed returns

Promises of daily profit are the clearest red flag of all.

Deposit pressure

Pushing you to pay or deposit on a specific exchange right now.

No grading rule

Any tiny gain gets called a win, so the win rate is meaningless.

No history

The group appeared last month with no track record at all.

Two of these deserve a closer look, because they catch the most people. The first is paid shills. A scam room fills the chat with fake profit screenshots to manufacture trust, and a new member sees a wall of green and assumes it is real. The fix is the same as always. Ask for the timestamped log, not the screenshots. The second is the pump-and-dump. A group quietly buys a tiny low-cap coin, tells everyone to pile in, and sells into the rush they created. The dead giveaway is urgency with no entry plan, no target and no invalidation. A real call gives you a plan you can check. A pump gives you a ticker and a countdown.

The Receipts

The record behind the free group

Numbers you can check, not adjectives. This is what the free group sits on top of.

70.18%

Documented win rate across 929 graded calls, with 652 winners and small gains counted as losses.

2,500+

Wins posted by members in the community, with almost all of them backed by a screenshot.

40,000+

Members sharing entries, exits and wins, with more than $20M in profits posted since 2017.

Put it together. We have run since 2017. The community has posted more than $20M in profits, across 40,000+ members and over 370 livestreams. The graded report covers 929 calls under a fixed rule, with 652 winners, a 70.18% logged win rate. Members have posted 2,500+ wins, and nearly all of them carry a screenshot. None of that is a promise about your next trade. It is a record of what already happened, and every piece of it is something you can open and check yourself. That is the only kind of proof worth anything in this space.

The wins are specific, not vague. Logged gem calls in the record include HYPE at +700%, AVNT at +350%, DOGE at +303%, ASTER at +300%, MANTLE at +264%, BONK at +196% and LINK at +155%. Each one sits in the database with the date it was called and the trader who called it. They are real outcomes from the log, not a sales reel, and they sit on the same record as the calls that lost. Show me a group that posts its losers next to numbers like these and you have found a rare one.

It bears repeating, because it is the most important sentence on this page. A documented win rate is a record of the past. It is not a guarantee, a forecast, or a promise about your account. Crypto is volatile and you can lose money. Some of those 929 graded calls lost, by design, because we count the small ones as losses too. The reason to trust a number is that you can check it, not that it is high. Everything here is built so you can do exactly that.

FAQs

Frequently asked questions

The best crypto signals come from a group that logs every call with a timestamp, publishes the grading rule in advance, and shows the losers next to the winners. Judge the proof, not the marketing. Gem Hunters logs every call under a fixed rule. Across 929 independently graded calls from April 2024 to November 2025, 652 were winners, a documented 70.18% win rate with small wins counted against it. Past performance does not guarantee future returns.

ChatGPT can explain a chart or a strategy, but it has no live market feed and no track record, so it cannot give a real trading signal you can verify. A real signal needs an entry, a target, an invalidation level, and a timestamp that gets graded later. A general AI model gives none of that. Use it to learn the concepts, then follow a group that logs and grades its calls.

Most free crypto signals are not reliable, because most are bait for a paid upsell with no record of whether the calls worked. A free signal is only as good as its proof. If the group logs every call with a timestamp and a fixed grading rule, free signals can be reliable to learn from. The Gem Hunters free group posts daily updates and select calls, and the full record is public so you can check it yourself.

Some traders do, but it is not a guarantee and it is not a target a signal group can promise. Any group that promises a fixed daily profit is a red flag. Returns swing with the market, and you can lose money fast in crypto. A logged win rate like 70.18% describes past calls, not a daily income. Treat signals as research to learn from, size your risk, and never risk money you cannot afford to lose.

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40,000+ Gem Hunters, daily calls with the reasoning attached, and a record you can actually check. No junk, just gems.

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