Telegram is the primary delivery channel for EasyClaw. Linking is always started from the web dashboard so your account, agent, and chat ID stay aligned. After linking, background runs, automations, and inbound webhooks (Pro) can reach you in the same thread you already use every day.
What linking does
It binds one Telegram chat to your EasyClaw agent. The managed OpenClaw runtime uses that binding for delivery and scoping — reminders, briefings, webhook summaries, and chat turns all respect the same chat ID.
How to connect
- Sign in to EasyClaw on the web and open the dashboard.
- Choose Connect Telegram (or the equivalent entry point your UI shows).
- Either open the deep link to start the bot with the right context, or copy the short code and send it to the bot if your flow uses manual verification.
- Return to the dashboard and confirm the chat shows as connected.
When you will need this page again
- You change phones, reinstall Telegram, or archive the old chat thread.
- You accidentally blocked the bot or removed the conversation.
- You created a second EasyClaw account and need to relink the correct one.
Examples
- First-time setup right after signup — pair before creating automations so test runs have somewhere to land.
- Reconnect after travel if Telegram was logged out on your device.
Plans and limits
Connecting Telegram is available on all paid and trial paths that include chat delivery. Feature limits after connection depend on Starter vs Pro, not on the link itself.
Common mistakes
- Trying to “connect” only inside Telegram without visiting the dashboard — the bot needs the dashboard-issued handshake.
- Using an old screenshot of a code that already expired — generate a fresh one.
- Expecting multiple unrelated Telegram accounts to share one agent without product support for that pattern — default is one primary chat per agent.
Related
Next step: once linked, read Using the agent and send your first reminder or briefing request.