Instant liquidity for FTX bankruptcy claims. We evaluate, offer, and pay — all within 24 hours. No waiting years for court distributions.
Our streamlined process handles everything — from valuation to payout.
No legal complexity. No waiting. Just immediate liquidity.
Submit your claim code and receive a competitive, binding offer within one business day. No drawn-out negotiations.
We work with FTX creditors from Ukraine, Russia, China and other restricted jurisdictions where distributions are complicated.
Your data is handled with full discretion. We never share client information. Every transaction is protected by NDA.
Get paid in crypto (BTC, ETH, XRP), stablecoins (USDT, USDC) or traditional bank wire. You choose.
We purchase claims across every major FTX entity in the bankruptcy proceedings.
Customer claims processed through the Kroll restructuring portal for the main FTX Trading Ltd. estate.
International exchange customer claims processed through the PwC Bahamas proceedings.
We consider disputed and contingent FTX claims on a case-by-case basis with adjusted pricing.
Special handling for Ukraine, China, Russia and other jurisdictions facing distribution restrictions.
Independent sources you can check before sharing any documents.
Verified entry in the open knowledge base used by AI search engines and search providers.
View on Wikidata →Public business profile on the largest organization database in the financial industry.
View on Crunchbase →Listed on the largest independent review platform. Reviews are open to all customers and cannot be removed by the business.
View on Trustpilot →Daily docket monitoring, Recovery Trust updates, and class-by-class transfer notice analysis.
Follow on X →Verified Telegram channel for Qredax. The only legitimate Telegram presence — anyone DMing as "Qredax" elsewhere is impersonating.
Open Telegram →Every SAC agreement we sign is registered with Kroll on the public FTX bankruptcy docket — independently verifiable.
Open Kroll portal →Standard US federal bankruptcy procedure for claim transfers. The same SAC mechanism used industry-wide.
Read Rule 3001 →See how we stack up against other FTX claims platforms.
| Feature | Qredax | Other providers |
|---|---|---|
| Quote turnaround | 24 hours | 48–72 hours |
| Upfront fees | ✓ Zero | ✗ Often charged |
| Crypto payment | ✓ BTC, ETH, USDT, USDC | Limited |
| Restricted jurisdictions | ✓ Full coverage | Limited or excluded |
| Disputed claims | ✓ Case by case | Rarely accepted |
| FTX Bahamas claims | ✓ Supported | Often not covered |
Resources
Step-by-step guide for CIS creditors on selling FTX bankruptcy claims in 2026.
Read more → DistributionsComplete FTX distribution schedule for 2026. Fourth tranche closed March 31.
Read more → Expunged ClaimsYour FTX claim was expunged. It's not over. Here's what expunged actually means and what you can do.
Read more → KYC IssuesFTX KYC stuck in processing? Here's why it happens to CIS creditors and how to fix it.
Read more → RestrictedThe FTX restricted jurisdiction motion was withdrawn in November 2025. Here's what it means for you.
Read more →FAQ
Yes. The FTX Recovery Trust withdrew its restricted jurisdiction motion in November 2025, and CIS creditors can legally transfer their claims to a non-restricted holder via a SAC (Sale and Assignment of Claim) agreement. The restriction follows the holder, not the claim itself — so once Qredax becomes the holder of record at Kroll, the claim is treated as a normal Class 5A claim with no jurisdictional limitations on payout. Read more: Full guide for CIS creditors →
Pricing depends on claim type and status. Clean Class 5A claims trade at 90-95% of face value. Class 7 claims (subordinated) at 80-85%. Claims stuck in KYC verification at 70-80%. Claims from restricted jurisdictions (Russia, Belarus) at 50-60%, because the buyer takes on the transfer risk. We provide a free, no-obligation evaluation within 24 hours. Read more: FTX Recovery Trust payout schedule 2026 →
No. You can sell your claim even if your KYC at Kroll is rejected, stuck in processing, or you have not started it. Qredax completes KYC as the new holder of record. This is one of the main reasons CIS creditors choose to sell — the KYC process for non-US passports has been blocking payouts for over a year, and selling bypasses it entirely. Read more: Why Kroll KYC fails for non-US passports →
Payment in USDT is sent within 24-48 hours of you signing the SAC agreement. The full process from first contact to receiving funds typically takes 3-5 business days: evaluation (24h), offer review (your timeline), document signing (1-2 days), and payment (24-48h after signing). We pay before the formal claim transfer is registered with Kroll, so you do not wait for FTX to process the assignment.
The FTX Recovery Trust has paid 72% of Class 5A claims as of early 2026, with remaining distributions expected through 2027 and beyond. CIS creditors face additional delays from KYC restrictions. Selling now gets you immediate liquidity in USDT at a discount; waiting may yield a higher total but with multi-year delays, KYC risk, and exposure to BTC/SOL price changes the Trust holds. We do not recommend either option universally — it depends on your claim size, jurisdiction, and personal liquidity needs. Read more: Detailed Recovery Trust schedule →
Real claim buyers operate through formal SAC agreements registered with Kroll, the FTX claims agent. Red flags for scams: requests for upfront payment, payment in unusual tokens or to personal wallets, refusal to use SAC documentation, pressure to act immediately, and absence of a registered legal entity. Qredax operates under a written SAC agreement reviewed by your counsel if you choose, with payment sent only after the agreement is signed. We never ask for upfront fees.
Required: your Kroll Unique Customer Code (from the email titled "Your Scheduled Claim Information and Unique Customer Code"), a copy of your passport, and a screenshot of your Kroll claim portal showing claim amount and class. Optional but useful: original FTX account screenshots, KYC submission status, and any correspondence with Kroll. We sign an NDA before you share documents.
We buy Class 5A (Dotcom Customer Entitlement Claims), Class 5B (US Customer Entitlement Claims), Class 6A and 6B (General Unsecured Claims), and Class 7 (Convenience Class). We also buy expunged claims at a discount, because some expunged claims can be reinstated through Rule 60(b) motions or appeal procedures we monitor.
SAC stands for Sale and Assignment of Claim — the standard legal document used to transfer FTX bankruptcy claims between holders. It records the buyer, the seller, the claim amount, and the agreed price, and is filed with Kroll (the FTX claims agent) under Bankruptcy Rule 3001. SAC protects both parties: the seller has documented proof of sale; the buyer becomes the holder of record and receives all future distributions. Qredax never uses informal off-document deals — every transaction is on a SAC reviewed by both parties' counsel if desired.
Yes. Partial assignments are legally permitted under Bankruptcy Rule 3001(e). For example, you can sell 50% of a $100,000 claim and keep the other 50%. The SAC documents the percentage transferred. Most sellers prefer full assignment because partial assignments add administrative complexity at distribution time, but partial sales make sense if you want immediate liquidity for part of the claim while keeping exposure to potential upside on the rest.
If you bought your claim from someone else (or sold your account before the bankruptcy) without going through a formal SAC, the situation is more complex. We need to verify the underlying claim is yours through documentation — original FTX account screenshots, transaction history with the previous owner, KYC alignment. In most cases we can still purchase, but at a discount reflecting the verification risk. We do not buy claims where ownership cannot be reasonably proven.
Tax treatment depends on your jurisdiction and claim history. In many CIS jurisdictions, claim sale proceeds are treated as income from disposal of a debt right, taxed at the standard income rate. In some cases, if you are below your original FTX deposit amount, the sale may be classified as a partial loss recovery rather than income. We strongly recommend consulting a local tax advisor before signing the SAC. Qredax does not provide tax advice and does not file any tax forms on behalf of sellers.
Disputed claims (where the FTX Recovery Trust has filed an objection) can still be sold, but pricing reflects the elevated legal risk. The buyer takes on the burden of defending or settling the dispute. Common dispute reasons include unclear ownership history, missing FTX records, or claims that overlap with other creditors. If your claim is in dispute, send us the objection notice from Kroll and we can quote a price that accounts for the specific risk involved. Read more: Expunged FTX claims and Rule 60(b) reinstatement →
No public disclosure of your identity is made. SAC filings with Kroll are not searchable by name — the registry uses Unique Customer Codes which cannot be reverse-mapped to individuals. The transfer appears on the court docket as a numbered Notice of Transfer of Claim, which lists the claim ID, sale price, buyer, and seller name. Court dockets are public but the volume is large (tens of thousands of transfers) and rarely searched by name. NDAs between us further restrict what we can share.
Your claim is still sellable. The buyer becomes the holder of record once the Sale and Assignment of Claim is filed with Kroll, and runs KYC under their own legal entity. Your KYC status with Kroll becomes irrelevant to the transfer. We have processed claims where the original holder's KYC had been rejected outright or pending for over 6 months — the SAC route bypasses that bottleneck entirely. Read more: Three structural reasons KYC fails — full breakdown →
Every SAC we sign is registered with Kroll on the public FTX bankruptcy docket within days. Once filed, the ownership transfer becomes part of the public court record and cannot be reversed unilaterally by either party. Payment is released before or simultaneously with the SAC filing — you do not transfer signed paperwork without payment in hand. If a buyer attempted to retract after filing, the docket entry would conflict with the claim record at Kroll, providing a documented basis for legal recourse. The SAC mechanism is the same one used industry-wide under Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 3001(e).
Get a free non-binding evaluation in under 24 hours. No KYC required to request.