A Crypto Box

Crypto tool

Crypto Transfer Calculator

Estimate how much crypto to prepare before sending BTC, ETH, USDT, USDC, SOL, XRP, DOGE, LTC, BCH, or TRX.

Choose the asset, choose the network, enter the target receive amount, and review the estimated fee. This is a planning tool, not live fee data. Always check the final withdrawal fee and receiving network before sending.

How to use it

  1. 1Choose the asset you plan to send.
  2. 2Choose the network, if the asset has more than one option.
  3. 3Enter the amount the recipient should receive.
  4. 4Review the estimated transfer or withdrawal fee.
  5. 5Check the recommended total, then verify the final fee on the withdrawal screen.

Transfer estimate

Prepare a Crypto Transfer

Asset and Network Notes

These notes explain common transfer paths. They are not guarantees, and they do not replace checking the receiving platform.

BTC

Bitcoin network fees can vary depending on congestion and wallet or exchange settings.

ETH / ERC20

Ethereum-based transfers can be more expensive because of gas fees.

TRC20 / Tron

Often used for stablecoin transfers, but only safe when the receiving side clearly supports Tron/TRC20.

BEP20 / BNB Chain

Often low-cost, but the sender and receiver must both support BEP20.

Solana / SPL

Often low-cost, but support varies by exchange, wallet, and platform.

Polygon

Often low-cost, but users must confirm the exact Polygon network is accepted.

XRP

XRP transfers may require a destination tag or memo on some exchanges.

DOGE / LTC / BCH / TRX

Usually simpler single-network transfers, but still verify address format, platform support, and withdrawal fees.

Before you send crypto

Network mismatch, wrong addresses, or missing memo/tag details can cause permanent loss. Always check the deposit screen before sending.

  1. 1Confirm the asset.
  2. 2Confirm the network.
  3. 3Confirm the receiving address.
  4. 4Check memo or tag requirements for XRP and some exchange deposits.
  5. 5Check minimum deposit amounts.
  6. 6Check the final withdrawal fee on your exchange or wallet.
  7. 7Consider a small test transaction when unsure.
  8. 8Save the transaction hash.

FAQ

Are these fees live?

No. These fees are estimates, not live quotes. Use them for planning, then check current fees on the exchange or wallet withdrawal screen before sending.

Why can exchange withdrawal fees differ from network fees?

Exchanges and wallets can set their own withdrawal fees. Those fees may include the on-chain network cost, platform policy, current congestion, account status, and other operational rules.

Can I send USDC on the wrong network?

No. Network mismatch can cause permanent loss. USDC can exist on multiple networks, so the sending network and receiving network must match exactly.

Why does XRP sometimes need a destination tag?

Some exchanges use one XRP deposit address for many users and rely on a destination tag or memo to credit the right account. Missing or wrong tag details can cause serious problems.

Which crypto is usually cheap to transfer?

Some networks and assets are often lower-cost than others, but no coin or network is always cheapest. Fees may vary by platform, network conditions, withdrawal policy, and account status.

Should I send a test transaction?

When you are unsure, a small test transaction can be a sensible check if the extra fee is acceptable. Confirm it arrives correctly before sending a larger amount.

Is this financial advice?

No. This page is educational and is not financial, legal, tax, or security advice.

What should I check before sending crypto?

Check the asset, network, receiving address, memo or tag, minimum deposit, withdrawal fee, and receiving platform support. If anything is unclear, stop before sending.

Related Guides and Tools

Important Notes

This page is educational and uses estimated fees only. Fees, minimums, supported assets, supported networks, and withdrawal rules may vary by region, platform, product, account status, payment method, and current terms.

Always verify the asset, network, address, amount, memo or tag, and final withdrawal fee before sending. Crypto transfers can be difficult or impossible to reverse once broadcast.