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Bitbuy Login — Secure Access & Account Support

A practical, step-by-step guide to signing in, enabling two-factor authentication, recovering access, and safely exporting statements from your Bitbuy account.

How to log in (quick checklist)

1
Open the official site.

Type the Bitbuy web address into your browser or use a saved bookmark. Confirm the page uses HTTPS and shows a padlock before entering any credentials.

2
Click "Log In" and enter credentials.

Provide the email you registered with and your account password. If you use a password manager, allow it to autofill to avoid typing errors.

3
Complete two-factor authentication (2FA).

If 2FA is enabled, enter the one-time code from your authenticator app (recommended). Avoid SMS 2FA when possible because SIM attacks can bypass it.

4
Access dashboard & download records.

After signing in, head to the statements, activity, or reports area to export transaction history and tax documents. Store copies on an encrypted drive or secure cloud storage.

5
Sign out on shared devices.

Always log out and consider clearing cookies on public or shared computers to prevent session reuse.

If you can't log in

Use the "Forgot password" flow on the login page to receive a reset link at your registered email. If you no longer have access to that email, contact Bitbuy support via the verified channels on their website and be prepared to provide identity verification documents.

Security reminder: Never share your password or 2FA codes. Bitbuy support will never ask for your full password.

Best security practices

  • Create a long, unique password and store it in a password manager.
  • Enable app-based 2FA (Google Authenticator, Authy) and securely store recovery codes offline.
  • Keep your device OS and browser up to date to reduce vulnerabilities.
  • Use hardware wallets for large crypto holdings and keep exchange balances minimal.

Bookmark the official site and regularly export your statements for safekeeping.

Why secure login matters

Exchanges are attractive targets for attackers because they hold funds and user data. Even if an exchange has strong security internally, user account compromises (weak passwords, reused credentials, no 2FA) are a common attack vector. Treat your exchange login like a bank login: unique password, layered protections, and regular vigilance. Exporting statements ensures you can reconcile activity even if access becomes temporarily restricted.