TradeCircle vs individual grants
When to grant access one buyer at a time and when to use a TradeCircle to handle a known group all at once.
There are two ways to share restricted documents with buyers:
- Individual grants — case-by-case approval, one buyer per request. Detailed in Granting and revoking access.
- TradeCircle grants — pre-approve a known group of buyers; anyone in the group automatically gets access.
The right choice depends on how repeatable the relationship is.
When individual grants are right
Use one-at-a-time approval when:
- The buyer is new — first time you've heard of them, no prior context.
- The asset is high-value and you want to keep a clean audit trail of exactly who saw what.
- The relationship is transactional — single deal, then likely no further interaction.
- You're still figuring out how serious the buyer is. Make them earn each document.
Most cross-border first-time deals fall into this bucket. The marginal effort of approving each document is small, and the audit trail per buyer is clean.
When a TradeCircle is right
Use a TradeCircle when:
- You resell to a known network — same 20-50 dealers month after month. Approving each new listing's documents for each of them is repetitive work.
- You wholesale or syndicate — you want all your repeat buyers to see new inventory immediately, before it goes wider.
- You operate within a regional or industry network that already trusts each other — you don't want to make them request access every time.
- You want a tier of preferential buyers — "premium tier" members of a circle get earliest access to new listings; the public marketplace sees them later or not at all.
In these patterns, the friction of per-request approval is what you're trying to remove.
How a TradeCircle changes the access model
A TradeCircle is a list of business profiles you've grouped together. You decide who's in it; new members either follow it (if the circle's access mode is FOLLOWERS) or request to join (if it's REQUEST_APPROVAL). See Access modes — Followers vs by request.
Two access patterns it unlocks:
1. Listing visibility limited to circle members
A listing's visibility can be set to TRADECIRCLE. The listing is then only discoverable by members of the linked circle — not the public marketplace. Anyone in the circle sees it immediately; no per-request approval needed for the basic listing view.
2. Document access for circle members
For each restricted document in UnitVault, you can grant access to everyone in TradeCircle X in a single action. New members joining the circle later inherit access automatically; revoking the circle's access (or removing a member from the circle) cuts access.
The trade-offs
| Individual grants | TradeCircle grants | |
|---|---|---|
| Setup effort | None | Build the circle once |
| Per-deal effort | High (approve each) | Low (granted via circle) |
| Audit trail | Per-buyer | Per-circle + per-buyer-at-time-of-access |
| New buyer onboarding | Approve once they request | Add them to the circle |
| Revocation granularity | Per-buyer | Remove from circle (revokes everywhere) or revoke for a specific listing |
| Best for | One-off cross-border deals | Repeat networks, syndicates, dealer groups |
Mixing both
The two modes coexist. A listing can:
- Be visible only to a TradeCircle, but still accept individual document-access requests from circle members for documents that aren't pre-shared with the circle.
- Be publicly visible and pre-share documents with a TradeCircle, while requiring individual approval for non-circle buyers.
Most active sellers end up with a tiered setup: a circle of known repeat buyers who get early access and lighter approval friction, plus the public marketplace where individual grants apply.
Practical setup
To set up a TradeCircle and grant access to its members:
- Create a TradeCircle — see Creating a TradeCircle.
- Add or invite the businesses you want in it.
- On a listing, set visibility to TRADECIRCLE and link the circle. Or keep visibility public but pre-grant document access to the circle.
You can adjust circle membership at any time without re-issuing per-document approvals — that's the whole point.


