How to Verify Live On-Chain Balances
Breezing supports 40+ chains simultaneously, which means a single wallet address might hold tokens on Ethereum, Polygon, Optimism, and more. To verify your balances, you should check each network against its respective block explorer (like Etherscan or Polygonscan).- Navigate to the Wallets page in Breezing.
- Select the wallet address you want to verify.
- Open a new tab and go to a block explorer, such as Etherscan for Ethereum. Paste your wallet address to pull up the live token balances.
- Back in Breezing, click the Filter button.
- In the Network filter, select the exact network you are checking (e.g.,
Ethereum). This hides transactions from other chains so you can compare apples-to-apples. - Compare the token balances listed in Breezing (e.g., your total ETH or specific DAO tokens) against the balances reported by Etherscan.
- Repeat the process for other networks by changing the filter in Breezing to
Polygonand checking Polygonscan, etc.
What if the balances do not match?
If there is a discrepancy and you haven’t started categorizing your transactions yet:- The easiest fix is to completely delete the wallet connection in Breezing.
- Re-add the wallet address via API. Sometimes, the initial API sync might drop a connection mid-pull due to network limits. A fresh read usually resolves the issue.
Video Transcript
Video Transcript
All right, cool. Once you got your wallet address in, now you need to verify the balances are accurate. So, what you’re going to do is you’re going to you see kind of there’s a a wallet here. I added the Treasury wallet. There’s an ops wallet. So, I need to verify these balance. So, I’ll go to the Treasury wallet first. I’ll select the wallet address up here. I’m going to go to Ether Scan. Throw an Ether Scan. Throw that wallet in there. It’s going to give me kind of the balance. And then I now need to verify. So, these are all the balances that I’ve for all the transactions I’ve added. I’ve added 55 of them. I first just need to filter for just the Ethereum network because again I’m just checking E ether Ether scan right now which is on the Ethereum blockchain. Click filter and you see it’s kind of like filtered out the transaction. So two transactions were not related to Ether Scan. So that’s pretty important. So now I want to verify that this Ethereum balance matches with this Ethereum balance right here. And it looks like it does. 062464 0644. And then you do kind of the same thing all the way down. You come down here look at Dow. the Dow balance is 64906. Look at Dow 64906. Looks like it’s matching pretty well. Um, that’s kind of what you want to do mostly. And then once you kind of have done it for Ethereum, you then want to kind of see what other chains there are. You see there’s like one for Polygon. So now you want to check Polygon. And the way you do Polygon is again you come down here, you then select the uh the chain in, you select Polygon, go ahead and filter it. There’s two transaction polygon. And now don’t worry about this negative balance on Madic because this is actually they changed their symbol recently to pull. So that’s why it’s appearing negative right now. So yeah, you go to polygon scan. Take wallet as well in here. You then just want to throw it in here. And then you want to check the 544831. 5483. It does match once you subtract this one. So there you go. Um that’s good to go. If the balances do not match, the best way to do it is to just read the wallet. So, if you haven’t done any work yet, the best way to do it is just read the wallet. Click here, delete the wallet, and then again, just do the same steps and just read it. Usually, that kind of fixes the problem. Sometimes there might be like a slight delay on the API, but yeah, that kind of gives you an idea how to work this. And yeah, looking forward to showing more