How to Swap BTC to GHO

Step-by-step guide

BTC iconBTC
to
GHO iconGHO

How to Swap BTC to GHO

Swapping BTC to GHO is a common move for users who want to reduce exposure to short-term price swings while staying liquid inside crypto markets.

On ZyroShift, this route is currently prefilled as BTC on Bitcoin to GHO on Ethereum. The examples below use GHO on Ethereum as the destination side of the route. The guide below focuses on the practical checks that matter before you send funds.

Network options

You send

BTC icon

BTC

BTC currently supports 2 send networks on ZyroShift.

Choose the source network that matches where you are sending from.

Bitcoin iconBitcoinLiquid iconLiquid

You receive

GHO icon

GHO

GHO currently has one supported receive network only: Ethereum.

The destination network stays fixed because there is only one available settlement rail.

Ethereum (ERC20) iconEthereum (ERC20)

Choose the rate mode first

Variable Rate and Fixed Rate change what the user must do next.

Variable Rate

Use Variable Rate when you want to create the shift first, then send a deposit amount that stays inside the live min/max range for the route.

You choose BTC, its source network, GHO, and the destination network first.

You enter the GHO receiving address, then press SHIFT.

After the order is created, ZyroShift shows the deposit address, QR code, and the live min/max range for the amount you can send.

Fixed Rate

Use Fixed Rate when you want to lock the quote first. ZyroShift then expects you to send one exact deposit amount within the quote window.

You enter the exact BTC amount before creating the order.

You also enter the GHO receiving address before pressing SHIFT.

After the order is created, the deposit address and QR stay tied to that exact amount, and the fixed quote is only valid for 15 minutes.

Step-by-step guide

These deterministic visuals mirror the swap-card flow so the guide can show the route clearly without pretending to be a live quote.

1

Select the coins to SHIFT

Select BTC as the coin you send.

In this example, BTC only uses Bitcoin, so the source network stays preselected.

Select GHO as the coin you want to receive.

Because the destination side is pinned to Ethereum here, the network stays fixed for the example route.

You send

BTC icon

BTC

Coin

NetworkBitcoin iconBitcoin
->

You receive

GHO icon

GHO

Coin

NetworkEthereum iconEthereum
2

Enter the receiving address and, if needed, the fixed amount

For Variable Rate, paste the GHO receiving address and then press SHIFT. For Fixed Rate, enter the exact BTC amount first, paste the GHO receiving address, and then press SHIFT.

3

Deposit the coin to the address shown

⦿ Once you press SHIFT, ZyroShift creates the order and shows the deposit address plus QR for the cross-network route.

If the order is Variable Rate, the next screen tells you the live min/max deposit range and lets you send any amount inside that range to the generated wallet address or QR.

If the order is Fixed Rate, the next screen tells you to send the exact locked amount to the generated wallet address or QR before the 15-minute timer expires.

⦿ Send BTC exactly as the order requires

On the created shift page, copy the provided deposit address or scan the QR code, then open your own wallet app or exchange app and send BTC. Variable Rate lets you send the amount you want as long as it stays within the shown minimum and maximum, while Fixed Rate requires the exact amount shown on the quote.

Deposit address

bc1qzyroshift7deposit2btc8route4example9x7h3
Copy

Copy the address or scan the QR code in your wallet app.

Minimum

0.0015 BTC

Maximum

0.8500 BTC

Receive address

0xReceiveAddressExampleForEthereum000000000000

Rate mode

Variable Rate

4

Wait for confirmation and receive GHO

After the deposit is sent, wait for detection, confirmation, and final settlement. Many faster routes settle in roughly 20 seconds to 1 minute after the deposit is detected, but Bitcoin confirmation time, route conditions, or destination-network load can still make the full process take longer.

Illustrative status screen

Once the deposit confirms and the route settles, the shift moves to the completed state.

Mock status screen

Completed shift example

You received GHO

Done

Amount received

Example GHO settlement

Deposit detected

Confirmed on source network

Settlement sent

Delivered on Ethereum

Status

Order complete

Pair snapshot

Current prefilled route

BTC on Bitcoin -> GHO on Ethereum

Source network selection

BTC uses Bitcoin as the send network in this example, so the source side stays preselected.

Primary use case

Usually used to move from BTC volatility into GHO liquidity.

Destination network context

GHO currently settles through a single supported destination network on ZyroShift, so the preset shown here is the route you should expect.

Timing reality

The final timeline depends on deposit detection, confirmation depth, route processing, and settlement on Ethereum.

Why users swap BTC to GHO

Why users swap BTC to GHO

Move out of BTC price exposure and into GHO when users want a more stable balance after a market move.

Hold value in a liquid stable asset before redeploying into another trade, bridge, or treasury transfer.

GHO is widely used across exchanges, apps, and on-chain workflows, so it can be a practical settlement asset after leaving BTC.

Fees and timing

Fees and transaction time for BTC to GHO

Because the source side is Bitcoin, total completion time begins with Bitcoin deposit detection and confirmation depth before settlement can be released, even if many faster routes settle very quickly once the deposit is recognized.

Network cost starts with the send side. When BTC is sent on Bitcoin, congestion can change the effective cost of getting the route started.

The final GHO amount can still move with route liquidity, provider fees, and slippage conditions at the moment the order is processed.

Always treat the live builder and the shift page as the source of truth for minimums, maximums, and order instructions before funds leave your wallet.

If you choose GHO on Ethereum (ERC20), downstream settlement fees can feel heavier during peak activity than lighter destination rails.

Network compatibility

Network compatibility checks before you send funds

Make sure the receiving wallet supports GHO on Ethereum before you create the order.

Because this route is pinned to one destination rail, keep the receiving wallet aligned with the preset network instead of assuming every GHO address is interchangeable.

Never send the source asset to the receiving address. The deposit address is generated only after the order is created and must be followed exactly.

Common mistakes to avoid

Using the wrong destination network

GHO exists on multiple rails, so the receiving wallet has to match the destination network you choose. A wallet that only supports one version of GHO should not be used for another.

Ignoring source-side network costs

If the send transaction spends more on network cost than expected, the amount that actually reaches the route can fall below the live minimum. That is especially important when the source side starts with BTC.

Sending before rechecking the order screen

The deposit address, live limits, and route details should always be rechecked on the created order page before funds move. Treat that screen as the operational source of truth.

Ready to act on the live route?

Open the exact BTC to GHO swap page.

This guide explains the process. The live builder and the created shift page remain the operational source of truth for rates, deposit rules, and final execution details.

Related routes

Reverse route

Looking for the reverse path?

GHO iconGHOBTC iconBTC

Move in the opposite direction while keeping the same pair context available from a dedicated route page.

Pair FAQ

Is it safe to swap BTC to GHO?

It can be, provided you verify the route details, use the exact deposit instructions created for the order, and confirm that the receiving wallet supports the destination network.

How long does it take to swap BTC to GHO?

Completion time depends on deposit detection, network confirmations, route processing, and final settlement. For this route, the shift page is the best live reference before you send funds.

What affects the final amount of GHO I receive?

Source-chain network cost, route fees, slippage, and available liquidity can all influence the final amount that settles to the destination wallet.

Why do users swap BTC into GHO instead of holding the original asset?

GHO is often used when users want a more stable balance, easier venue transfers, or a liquid settlement asset after exiting BTC exposure.

Why does the destination network matter when receiving GHO?

Because this route settles GHO on Ethereum, the receiving wallet has to support that exact network. A mismatch between address and destination rail can delay or break settlement.

Do I need identity verification for every route?

Requirements depend on the route provider and compliance checks applied at execution time. Review the live flow and route terms instead of assuming every pair behaves the same way.

Route disclaimer

Rates, minimums, and maximums are provider-driven and can change before the shift is created.

Always verify the deposit instructions on the shift page before sending funds.

The selected receiving network must match the destination wallet and asset route.

For BTC to GHO, the live builder and shift page remain the final source of truth.