
The word "free" has been so badly abused in the trading industry that it has almost lost all meaning. Behind the label, you'll typically find a fourteen-day trial, a version stripped of its useful features, a percentage taken from each transaction, or a subscription that appears at the exact moment the tool starts being useful to you.
Kryll follows none of these patterns. What you download is the complete version of the product, with no deferred strings attached.
What the product doesn't include
Kryll has no subscription screen. It also has no pricing grid, no trial period, and no feature locked behind an "upgrade to a higher plan" button. The number of bots you can run is subject to no cap, nor is the complexity of your strategies, and no commission is taken on your transactions. Your bank card will never come into play.
The practical consequences
A tool that costs nothing radically changes the way you use it. The small mental profitability calculations you run before every decision disappear, and several uses become possible that weren't really viable with a monthly subscription in mind.
Testing a strategy idea on a small amount of capital, for example, stops being pointless. Running eight bots in parallel to compare their behavior costs no more than running just one. And nothing stops you from setting the tool aside for six months, long enough for a market cycle to feel readable again, then picking up exactly where you left off. No invoice will have arrived in the meantime.
A matter of structure, not commercial policy
This point is worth clarifying, because it is often misunderstood: the absence of fees on your trades is not a marketing promise. It stems from the way Kryll is built.
The software runs on your machine. Your API keys stay there. Your capital never passes through our servers at any point, and we have no access to your funds. Charging a commission on your transactions would be technically impossible for us. The profits generated by a strategy therefore come back to you in full, and this doesn't depend on any decision on our part, it is the product's architecture that guarantees it.
Open source as a safety net
If Kryll is entirely free, the explanation also lies in its open-source nature. A public, auditable, and freely modifiable codebase does not give its authors the option of deciding, one morning, that access to the software will become paid. The switch would be theoretically possible, but it would immediately give way to a community-maintained fork. That prospect alone is enough to make the idea unattractive.
Kryll is therefore not merely a product made available to you. It is, to a certain extent, a product that belongs to you.
Frequently asked questions
A few questions come up regularly enough to be worth addressing.
- "Is a subscription planned down the line?"No. Neither the project's business model nor its architecture provide for one, and the open-source nature makes the scenario unconvincing.
- "Is the free version limited?"No. All features are present from the very first launch.
- "Where's the catch?"There isn't one ;)
Zero at installation, zero per month, zero on your trades. Kryll, in all of this, is simply the engine that keeps everything running.

