Swap TRX to USDT. No account, no KYC, no one asking why you want your own money.
Pick TRX as your "send" coin, paste your USDT wallet address (TRC-20 for same chain speed, ERC-20 if you need Ethereum compatibility, or TON if that's your flavor), and hit swap. CoinVast finds you a rate (0.5% floating spread or 1.0% fixed, depending on whether you like surprises or not), shows you a deposit address, and after 20 confirmations on the Tron network your USDT arrives. Minimum send is 50 TRX. The whole process takes less time than explaining to someone what staking bandwidth on Tron actually means.
Last updated
Minimum is 50 TRX
No account · Deposits screened before exchange, never frozen after
Tron is the blockchain that accidentally became the world's stablecoin highway. While everyone was debating Ethereum gas fees and Solana's uptime, Tron quietly turned into the network that moves more USDT than any other chain on earth. Transactions cost fractions of a cent. Confirmations happen in seconds. And the network has processed trillions in stablecoin volume like it's nothing. Tron is the quiet kid who turned out to be running the entire cafeteria.
TRX, the native token of this empire, powers the whole machine. You stake it for energy, burn it for bandwidth, vote with it for governance, and yes, speculate on its price like every other token in existence. But TRX is volatile. It goes up, it goes down, it does that sideways thing where you can't decide if you're bored or nervous. USDT, meanwhile, just sits at one dollar. One constant, unwavering, beautifully boring dollar.
The TRX to USDT swap is the trade you make when you want to step off the price rollercoaster without leaving the amusement park. Maybe TRX just had a good run and you want to bank those gains before they evaporate. Maybe you need stable value to send to a friend, fund a payment, or just park somewhere calm while the rest of the market has a meltdown. Either way, converting TRX to Tether keeps you on chain, liquid, and free from the bureaucratic nightmares of traditional exchanges.
In 2026, the TRX to USDT route on Tron is especially elegant because both tokens live on the same network. You're swapping a native asset for its most popular stablecoin on the same rails, which means no bridging, no cross chain hops, no "which network did I pick again?" panic attacks. If you choose TRC-20 for your USDT payout, you're staying on Tron entirely. The fees are basically a rounding error. CoinVast handles this swap through a non-custodial flow. No registration, no identity documents, no waiting 72 hours while a compliance team decides whether you're allowed to touch your own crypto. You send TRX, you get USDT. Your keys, your coins, your business.
TRX → USDT, by the numbers
- You send
- Tron (TRX) on the Tron network.
- You receive
- Tether (USDT) on the Tron (TRC-20) network, at an address you control.
- Deposit confirmations
- 20 on Tron. At roughly 3-second blocks, that is about 1 minute of waiting before the exchange starts.
- Minimum swap
- 50 TRX. Below that, network fees would eat too much of the swap to be worth it.
- Spread
- 0.5%, printed on the quote next to the payout network fee. There is no deposit fee.
- Typical total time
- About 5 to 15 minutes from sending your TRX to USDT arriving at your address.
Confirmation counts and minimums above are the live values our exchange engine uses, not marketing copy. Block times are network averages and can vary.
Three steps. One of them is just waiting.
- 01
Set the amount, paste your USDT address
Choose how much TRX you are sending. The card quotes your USDT payout with the spread and network fee already counted in. Paste the Tron (TRC-20) address the payout should land at, plus an optional TRX refund address in case the swap cannot complete.
- 02
Send one TRX payment
You get a deposit address on the Tron network. Send your TRX to it from any wallet, in one payment of at least 50 TRX. No account, no email, nothing to install.
- 03
Watch the order page
Your deposit needs 20 confirmations on Tron, about 1 minute. We screen it before the exchange starts, then send USDT to your address and post the transaction hash on your order page.
Why people convert TRX to USDT
Profit taking is the number one reason. TRX has a habit of making quiet, steady climbs and then giving back a chunk of gains when the broader market gets spooked. If you watched your TRX position grow 30% and that little voice in your head says "maybe lock some of this in before the chart changes its mind," swapping to USDT is exactly how you listen to that voice. You keep the gains. The number stops moving. You can go outside without checking your phone every four minutes.
Cheap and fast transfers are the practical reason that makes TRX to USDT almost unfairly convenient. Sending USDT on TRC-20 costs almost nothing. We're talking fractions of a cent while Ethereum users are paying a dollar or more for the same thing. If you need to move value to another person, another wallet, or another country, converting TRX to USDT and sending it on Tron is like taking the express lane while everyone else is stuck in traffic paying tolls.
Waiting for a better entry is the trader's favorite. You sell TRX into USDT when you think the price ran too far too fast, then sit in stablecoins until the chart dips back to a level that makes you feel something. USDT is the waiting room of crypto. It's not glamorous, but it's stable, and the WiFi works. Portfolio rebalancing is underrated too. If TRX pumped and now makes up half your portfolio, you've got concentration risk. That's a fancy way of saying one bad Tron headline could wreck your week. Rotating some TRX into USDT spreads things out so you can sleep without worrying about Justin Sun's next tweet.
DeFi and stablecoin yields are a real play. USDT lending pools on Tron and other networks offer predictable returns without the stomach lining damage of holding volatile tokens. Converting TRX to USDT and parking it in a yield protocol is a real strategy for people who'd rather earn 5% calmly than ride a 50% swing hoping it goes the right direction.
Privacy is a factor for plenty of people. Centralized exchanges that convert TRX to fiat want your passport, your address, a selfie, your life story, and probably your favorite color. CoinVast asks for none of that. You provide a receiving address, send TRX, and get USDT. The only link between you and the swap is a transaction ID that doesn't have your name stapled to it.
TRX to USDT, asked and answered
What is the minimum amount of TRX I can swap for USDT on CoinVast?
50 TRX. At current prices that's roughly $16, give or take depending on what TRX is doing that particular afternoon. Enough to test the entire flow without sweating over it. Send the minimum, watch the USDT land, then go bigger once you trust the process.
How long does a TRX to USDT swap take on CoinVast?
CoinVast waits for 20 confirmations on the Tron network. Tron produces blocks quickly, so those 20 confirmations happen in about a minute. After that, your USDT gets sent to your wallet. If you picked TRC-20 for your payout, the USDT arrives almost instantly since it's the same network. Total time from clicking swap to holding Tether is usually under 5 minutes. You'll spend more time deciding which network to pick than actually waiting.
Which network will I receive my USDT on?
You choose. CoinVast supports USDT payouts on TRC-20 (Tron), ERC-20 (Ethereum), and TON. TRC-20 is the obvious pick here because your TRX is already on Tron, meaning the entire swap stays on one chain. Fees are microscopic and speed is ridiculous. ERC-20 makes sense if you need USDT on Ethereum for DeFi or wallet compatibility. TON is a solid pick if you live in the Telegram ecosystem and want your stablecoins close. Just make absolutely sure the address you paste matches the network you selected. Blockchains do not do forgiveness.
Is there any KYC or account registration required?
Zero. CoinVast is a non-custodial swap service. You provide a USDT receiving address, send TRX to a deposit address, and the swap runs automatically. No email, no phone number, no uploading a photo of yourself holding a handwritten note like you're in a hostage video. Automated pre-screening runs on transactions for compliance, but you never create an account or hand over personal information.
What's the difference between floating and fixed rate?
Floating rate (0.5% spread) means the final exchange rate is determined when your TRX deposit confirms on the Tron network. Since Tron confirms fast, the price movement window is small, but technically the rate isn't locked. Fixed rate (1.0% spread) locks the rate the moment you create the swap. You know exactly how much USDT you're getting before you send anything. Fixed costs a bit more but removes any uncertainty. For Tron's fast confirmations, floating is usually fine unless you're swapping a large amount and want zero surprises.
Can I swap USDT back to TRX on CoinVast?
Absolutely. The reverse pair works with the exact same non-custodial, no-KYC flow. Pick USDT as your send coin, paste a TRX address, and go. Useful for when you've been sitting in stablecoins and TRX dips to a price that makes your fingers itchy.
What happens if I send less than the minimum 50 TRX?
The swap won't process. A refund is usually possible, and since Tron's network fees are practically free, you'll get most of it back without being eaten alive by transaction costs. But still, just send at or above the 50 TRX minimum shown on the swap page. It's not hard.
What wallets work with CoinVast for this swap?
Any wallet where you hold your own keys. TronLink, Trust Wallet, Ledger with Tron support, Klever, or any non-custodial wallet that can send TRX to a standard Tron address. On the receiving side, any wallet that supports the USDT network you chose (TRC-20, ERC-20, or TON). CoinVast doesn't care what app you use, only that the addresses are valid and you actually control them.
Why is TRX to USDT on TRC-20 so much cheaper than swapping on Ethereum?
Because Tron was built for exactly this kind of thing. Sending USDT on TRC-20 costs fractions of a cent. Doing the same on Ethereum's ERC-20 can cost anywhere from $0.20 to $2 or more depending on gas prices, and that's on a calm day. If the network is congested, you might pay $5 or $10 just to move some Tether. Tron uses an energy and bandwidth system that keeps costs near zero for most transactions. It's the difference between flying economy and flying private, except economy is actually better this time.
Where to next
TRX in. USDT out. Nothing to sign up for in between.
Start this swapSetting it up takes under a minute. The blockchain handles the rest.