How it Works

How it works

A route-first swap flow from builder to settlement.

ZyroShift is built to move users from pair selection into a live route, then into a single-purpose shift page that handles deposit instructions, progress, and settlement tracking.

Step 01

Choose the route

Select the asset and network you send, then choose the asset and network you want to receive so the route is explicit before funds move.

Step 02

Set the destination

Enter the receiving wallet address that matches the destination asset and network, then review the route before creating the shift.

Step 03

Create and fund the shift

Open the live route, review the quote mode, and send funds to the deposit address shown on the shift page.

Step 04

Track to settlement

Follow the shift through waiting, received, processing, and completed states until the destination transfer lands in your wallet.

What to verify before sending

Crypto swap routes are operational pages, not just marketing pages. The route, network, and deposit instructions must be treated as exact before funds leave the wallet.

Always match the deposit network to the route exactly before sending funds.
If you use a fixed quote, send the exact deposit amount shown on the shift page.
Treat the shift page as the source of truth for the deposit address, minimums, and live status.
Wait for source-chain confirmations before treating a route as delayed.

FAQ

Do I need an account to use the swap flow?

The product flow is route-first. You choose the pair, create the shift, send from your wallet, and follow the status page without relying on an exchange-style account dashboard.

What is the difference between variable rate and fixed quote?

Variable rate follows the live market route until the deposit arrives. Fixed quote locks the route for a short window and requires the exact deposit amount shown on the order.

Where do I track the status after creating the route?

Each route opens its own shift page with deposit instructions, transaction progress, and settlement updates. You can also revisit that flow from the Track Order page with the shift ID.

What causes the most common route problems?

The most common issues come from sending on the wrong network, sending below the live minimum, or sending a fixed quote amount that does not match the locked route.