Disclosure: SolanaInfo is operated by the same team behind SolRecover.io. We disclose this so readers can evaluate this comparison with full context.
RefundYourSOL and SolRecover are two Solana rent recovery tools. Both help users close empty SPL token accounts and recover locked SOL, but they differ in pricing, architecture, and user experience.
In this comparison, we evaluate both tools across several dimensions. We encourage readers to verify current fees and features directly with each tool.
Overview
RefundYourSOL is one of the original Solana rent recovery tools. It launched during the Solana NFT boom and built a user base among traders who accumulated large numbers of empty token accounts. It has been operating for several years and has brand recognition in the Solana community.
SolRecover.io is a newer tool that offers lower pricing and a client-side architecture.
Fee Comparison
This is where the two tools diverge most dramatically.
| Metric | RefundYourSOL | SolRecover | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fee rate | 15% | 4% | SolRecover |
| Cost per 1 SOL recovered | 0.15 SOL | 0.04 SOL | SolRecover |
| Cost per 5 SOL recovered | 0.75 SOL | 0.20 SOL | SolRecover |
| Minimum fee | None | None | Tie |
| Network fees included | Yes | Yes | Tie |
The fee difference is stark. SolRecover charges 73% less than RefundYourSOL. For a user recovering 5 SOL, the difference is 0.55 SOL — approximately $88 at current prices. On fees alone, SolRecover has a clear advantage at every recovery amount.
To put this in perspective: the fee difference means RefundYourSOL costs 3.75 times more than SolRecover for the same basic service.
Security Architecture
The security models of these two tools differ fundamentally.
RefundYourSOL: Server-Assisted
RefundYourSOL uses a server-assisted model. When you connect your wallet:
- Your public key is sent to their server
- The server scans your accounts and identifies closeable ones
- The server constructs the close transaction
- The transaction is sent to your browser for signing
- After signing, the transaction is submitted
This means RefundYourSOL’s server is involved in transaction construction. While the tool has operated without known security incidents, this architecture requires you to trust that their server builds honest transactions and does not misuse your account data.
SolRecover: Fully Client-Side
SolRecover processes everything in your browser:
- JavaScript code queries the Solana RPC directly from your browser
- Empty accounts are identified in browser JavaScript
- The close transaction is constructed client-side
- You review and sign the transaction in your wallet
- The signed transaction is submitted from your browser
SolRecover’s server serves only the static webpage. It never sees your wallet address, account data, or transaction details.
Security Verdict
| Security Factor | RefundYourSOL | SolRecover |
|---|---|---|
| Private key exposure risk | None | None |
| Server trust required | Yes (transaction construction) | No (static files only) |
| Code auditability | Server code not visible | All code runs in browser |
| Data logging risk | Server sees wallet data | No server data handling |
| Attack surface | Frontend + backend | Frontend only |
SolRecover’s client-side model reduces the trust surface area since no server is involved in transaction construction. RefundYourSOL’s server-assisted model requires more trust in their infrastructure, but the tool has a longer operating history without known security incidents. For a detailed technical analysis, see our article on client-side vs server-side recovery.
User Experience
We tested both tools with the same wallet (containing 187 empty token accounts) and documented the experience.
RefundYourSOL UX
Connecting: Standard wallet adapter integration. Connection was smooth with Phantom.
Scanning: After connecting, the tool took approximately 8 seconds to scan our accounts. During scanning, a loading spinner was displayed without progress indication.
Account display: Empty accounts were listed with token names where available. The interface showed the total recoverable amount clearly.
Transaction process: The tool presented a transaction for signing. The transaction included a memo instruction identifying RefundYourSOL. Approval and confirmation took about 4 seconds.
Post-recovery: The interface updated to show the completed recovery and the net amount received after fees.
UX notes:
- Straightforward interface focused on functionality
- No individual account selection — recovers all empty accounts at once
- Scanning takes a few seconds longer due to server round-trips
- Has been operating longer, so some users may find the interface familiar
SolRecover UX
Connecting: Standard wallet adapter. Fast connection with Phantom.
Scanning: Account scanning completed in approximately 3 seconds — noticeably faster than RefundYourSOL, likely because the scan happens entirely in the browser without server round-trips.
Account display: Clean, modern interface showing each empty account with its token symbol. The total recoverable SOL and the fee breakdown are displayed prominently before you commit.
Transaction process: One click to initiate, wallet prompt appears immediately. Transaction confirmed in about 3 seconds.
Post-recovery: Clear success state showing exactly how much SOL was recovered and returned to the wallet.
UX positives:
- Fastest scanning we tested
- Clear fee breakdown before commitment
- Modern, intuitive design
- The entire process from connection to recovery took under 45 seconds
UX Verdict
| UX Factor | RefundYourSOL | SolRecover |
|---|---|---|
| Scan speed | ~8 seconds | ~3 seconds |
| Interface design | Functional, straightforward | Modern, clean |
| Fee transparency | Shown after scan | Shown with breakdown |
| Total time to recovery | ~90 seconds | ~45 seconds |
| Account selection | All at once | All at once |
| Mobile experience | Functional | Responsive |
Reliability
Both tools successfully recovered SOL from our test wallets. We tested each tool across five wallets ranging from 12 to 487 empty accounts.
RefundYourSOL: 5/5 successful recoveries. One instance of a transaction failing on the first attempt but succeeding on retry. No SOL was lost.
SolRecover: 5/5 successful recoveries. All transactions succeeded on the first attempt. For the wallet with 487 accounts, recovery was split into two transactions (Solana transaction size limits), both of which succeeded cleanly.
Both tools are reliable. SolRecover had a slight edge with no failed transactions, but RefundYourSOL’s single retry was handled gracefully.
Overall Scoring
| Category | Weight | RefundYourSOL | SolRecover |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fees | 35% | 5/10 | 8/10 |
| Security | 30% | 7/10 | 8/10 |
| UX | 20% | 7/10 | 7.5/10 |
| Reliability | 15% | 8/10 | 8/10 |
| Weighted Total | 100% | 6.5/10 | 7.8/10 |
When to Choose Each Tool
Choose SolRecover when:
- Lower fees are your priority
- You prefer a client-side architecture where transactions are built in your browser
- You want a faster scanning experience
Choose RefundYourSOL when:
- You value an established tool with a longer operating history
- You are already familiar with RefundYourSOL and trust its track record
- You prefer a tool with more community visibility and documentation
- You are comfortable with the 15% fee
Both tools are legitimate and accomplish the same goal. The main trade-off is between SolRecover’s lower fee and RefundYourSOL’s longer track record in the Solana ecosystem.
Conclusion
Both RefundYourSOL and SolRecover are legitimate tools that work as advertised. They differ primarily in fees and architecture:
- SolRecover charges a lower fee (4% vs 15%) and uses a client-side architecture, which may appeal to users who prioritize cost savings and browser-based transaction construction.
- RefundYourSOL has been operating longer and charges a 15% fee with a server-assisted architecture.
The right choice depends on your priorities. If minimizing fees is most important, SolRecover has the lower fee. If you prefer a tool that has been operating longer, RefundYourSOL has been around since earlier.
You can try SolRecover.io or RefundYourSOL to see how much locked SOL you can recover.
Disclosure: SolanaInfo is affiliated with SolRecover.io. We encourage readers to independently verify the claims in this comparison.