- Charity treasury
- $97
- Platform operations
- $3
The donor sees this split before confirming the transaction.
About
ChainPaws is a transparent crypto donation platform for animal care.
It helps donors support shelters while seeing how funds move, what fee is taken, and which care actions were published afterward.
Donors see the network, token, fee split, treasury path, and public proof records. Charity funds and platform funds stay separate from the first transaction.
Fee Distribution
ChainPaws starts with a transparent 3% platform fee. If sponsors cover infrastructure and operations, the contract fee can be reduced over time, with 0% as the ideal target.
The donor sees this split before confirming the transaction.
Sponsors can help move operating costs away from donor-funded platform fees.
ChainPaws is a founder-led project built to make animal-care donations easier to trust from the first public version.
ChainPaws connects crypto donors with animal-care spending records. Donations are tracked on-chain, treasury spending is linked to proof, and public pages show how support becomes food, medicine, transport, and shelter help.
The project is built around proof of care: every published spend should connect a treasury transaction with receipts, photos, notes, or other supporting records.
ChainPaws is open to sponsors and partners who want to support transparent animal care.
Partner recognition should stay clear and honest. Public partner listings should not imply that a partner controls charity funds or treasury spending.
ChainPaws can publish approved sponsor messages on the public Sponsors page.
Sponsor messages should stay clearly labeled and public-safe. A sponsor message does not give control over treasury funds, donor rankings, proof records, or spending decisions.
The donation contract splits the funds in the same transaction. The platform fee goes to the platform wallet. The charity portion goes to the treasury wallet for approved animal-care spending.
Donors can connect a wallet and use a public donor name above the wallet address. If no name is set, ChainPaws can show a generated supporter name so the leaderboard is easier to read.
Public donor account pages can show rank, score, total donated, and donation history once live indexed data is connected.
Proof records show what treasury funds were used for.
Files are stored off-chain. The blockchain stores the public reference to the proof bundle, so the spend can be traced without putting private files directly on-chain.
ChainPaws can show focused public progress for a charity event or a clearly labeled platform need.
Charity events can track progress toward animal-care needs such as food, medicine, transport, and shelter supplies.
Platform needs can track progress toward operating needs such as hosting, storage, indexing, or public proof infrastructure. These should stay clearly labeled and separate from charity treasury activity.
ChainPaws can publish public updates for project news, care notes, partner announcements, and platform progress.
Updates should be written for public readers and should avoid private operational details. When an update relates to a care record, funding event, roadmap item, or partner announcement, it can link readers to the related public page.
Charity funds and platform funds stay separate.
The default platform fee is 3%. It is shown before donation confirmation.
If sponsors cover infrastructure and platform operating costs, ChainPaws has a mechanism to reduce the platform fee over time. The ideal long-term target is 0% platform fee so the full donation can move to the charity treasury.
Treasury spending should be approved through multisig controls. After spending, proof should be published so donors can see how funds were used.
The design can support more EVM networks later by deploying the same contracts and adding that network to the app configuration.
ChainPaws does not need a token to work.
The first public version is focused on donations, public proof, treasury separation, and clear records instead of speculation, complex rewards, or hidden fund movement.