Your funds in Bitzaro Wallet are protected by multiple layers of security, from personal account safeguards to optional multi-signature joint accounts.
Personal Account Security
Every transaction from your wallet requires identity verification before it's submitted on-chain:
Passcode: A 6-digit numeric code you set up during onboarding.
Google Authenticator (2FA): Time-based 6-digit codes from your authenticator app. Biometrics: Fingerprint or Face ID on supported mobile devices.
Phone Number Verification: Used for account recovery and sensitive actions.
You can manage all of these from Settings → Security.
Vault — Multi-Signature Joint Accounts
For shared funds — business partners, investment clubs, family savings — Bitzaro Wallet offers Vault, a multi-signature joint account where transactions require approval from multiple designated members before executing.
Step 1
Create a vault, give it a name, and select the networks you want to manage.
Step 2
Define the rules — choose how many signatures are required to authorize a withdrawal (e.g., 2 of 3 members must approve) and invite trusted co-signers by email.
How it protects your funds:
No single member can move funds alone.
Even if one key is compromised, your assets remain protected.
Every withdrawal request is reviewed and approved by the required number of signers before going on-chain.
Risk Screening on Incoming Transactions
Bitzaro automatically screens incoming transactions for risk indicators using on-chain analytics. Suspicious transactions are flagged and held for your review before being added to your balance, helping protect your wallet from tainted funds.
Suspicious Transaction Review on Outgoing Transfers
Risk checks also run on transactions you send. If a withdrawal you submit matches a flagged address, sanctioned counterparty, or known scam pattern, the send is paused for your review before any funds leave your wallet.
Step 1
When a risk match is detected, a Review Suspicious Transaction prompt appears with the full transaction details — Transaction ID, destination address, and amount. Approve to proceed, or tap Reject to cancel.
Step 2
If you reject the transaction, you'll see a Rejected confirmation showing the full breakdown — destination address, network, amount, and fee. Funds were not sent. This protects you from scams, address-poisoning attempts, and accidental sends to compromised wallets.