KashRail exists for one reason: the official Binance signup flow, KYC checklist and P2P screens don't tell you what actually happens when you try to use them from Karachi, Dhaka, Nairobi or Delhi. The app looks the same everywhere, but the wallet you pay with, the ID you scan, and the rules your government has settled on are all different depending on where you live. We write the version of the guide that accounts for that.
The site covers four things: opening and verifying a Binance account, moving money in and out through EasyPaisa, JazzCash, bKash, M-PESA or UPI, fixing the signup and verification problems that come up most often, and being straight about where Binance stands legally in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Kenya. We also run a small set of calculators — fee, currency and KYC-document tools — built to answer a specific question rather than to look impressive.
We write under "the KashRail editors" rather than individual bylines. That's a pen name for a small team, not a claim to any professional credential we don't hold — nobody here is a licensed financial adviser or a lawyer, and nothing on this site should be read as either. What we do have is direct, repeated experience walking through these signup and P2P flows ourselves, across the wallets and countries this site covers, and we update a page when the flow changes under us.
Because exchange interfaces, fee schedules and local regulation move faster than most guides get rewritten, every article on KashRail carries a "last updated" date, and we treat that date as a promise, not decoration. When we catch something wrong — a stale limit, a renamed menu item, a detail that turns out to only be true for one country and not the others — we fix the article and log what changed on the corrections page. If you spot something that looks off, the fastest way to get it looked at is through the contact page.
KashRail earns a commission when a reader signs up through the Binance or OKX links on this site, using the referral codes disclosed throughout — details are on the how we earn page. That arrangement doesn't change what we write; the corrections above exist precisely because we'd rather flag our own mistakes than leave them for a reader to find the hard way.
We're not affiliated with Binance or OKX beyond the standard referral relationship either exchange offers anyone. We don't have inside access to their support systems, we can't speed up a KYC review, and we're not in a position to comment on account-specific decisions either platform makes. What we can do is describe the process as it actually works from the outside, the way any first-time user encounters it, and keep correcting that description as the process changes.