Route family
Bitcoin routes that exit into stable value
Use this family when the route starts in BTC and ends in a stable destination so volatility can drop before the next transfer, treasury step, or portfolio move.
Total routes:814
Featured now:13
Mapped next:801
Curated seeds:2
What this route family covers
BTC-to-stable routes sit between settlement and risk reduction. The destination is usually a stablecoin, but the right landing asset still depends on liquidity, network fit, and how the next step should happen after the route settles.
These pages matter when the user is already in Bitcoin, wants a more stable destination, and still needs to choose whether USDT, USDC, or another stable route is the cleanest landing asset.
How to compare routes in this family
Start with the stable landing asset
The first comparison is usually USDT vs USDC vs another stable destination, because that determines what the next wallet or treasury step looks like after BTC exits.
Then compare the landing network
A stable destination on Tron does not serve the same follow-up flow as a stable destination on Ethereum, Base, or another EVM rail.
Keep the BTC source context visible
Some routes begin from native BTC, while others begin from Bitcoin-linked variants on other networks. That source context changes how representative the route really is.
Representative BTC to stable routes
These examples highlight the cleanest BTC exit paths, starting with native BTC routes and then moving into broader Bitcoin-linked variants where the stable landing network changes the outcome.
BTC
USDC
Useful when the user wants to reduce Bitcoin exposure, exit into a stable asset, or prepare funds for another move without leaving the non-custodial flow.
Bitcoin → Ethereum
BTC
USDT
Useful when the user wants to reduce Bitcoin exposure, exit into a stable asset, or prepare funds for another move without leaving the non-custodial flow.
Bitcoin → Tron
BTC
USDC
Useful when the user wants to reduce Bitcoin exposure, exit into a stable asset, or prepare funds for another move without leaving the non-custodial flow.
Bitcoin → Polygon
BTC
USDC
Useful when the user wants to reduce Bitcoin exposure, exit into a stable asset, or prepare funds for another move without leaving the non-custodial flow.
Bitcoin → Arbitrum
BTC
USDC
Useful when the user wants to reduce Bitcoin exposure, exit into a stable asset, or prepare funds for another move without leaving the non-custodial flow.
Bitcoin → Base
BTC
USDC
Useful when the user wants to reduce Bitcoin exposure, exit into a stable asset, or prepare funds for another move without leaving the non-custodial flow.
Bitcoin → BNB Chain (BEP20)
BTC
USDC
Useful when the user wants to reduce Bitcoin exposure, exit into a stable asset, or prepare funds for another move without leaving the non-custodial flow.
Bitcoin → Solana
BTC
USDC
Useful when the user wants to reduce Bitcoin exposure, exit into a stable asset, or prepare funds for another move without leaving the non-custodial flow.
Bitcoin → Optimism
BTC
USDC
Useful when the user wants to reduce Bitcoin exposure, exit into a stable asset, or prepare funds for another move without leaving the non-custodial flow.
Bitcoin → Sonic
Bitcoin source assets
These are the Bitcoin-native or Bitcoin-linked assets most often used as the starting point when the route exits into stable value.
Common BTC source networks
Some exits start from native Bitcoin, while others start from Bitcoin-linked assets on other chains. That source environment still changes the route meaningfully.
Common stable landing networks
The stable landing network matters because it determines what the user can do next after leaving BTC.
BTC-to-stable family FAQ
What is the first thing to compare in BTC-to-stable routes?
Start with the landing asset and its network. The destination stablecoin and settlement rail usually matter more than the starting BTC leg once the decision to exit Bitcoin has already been made.
Why do some routes start from cbBTC or other BTC-linked assets?
The broader family includes Bitcoin-linked assets on other chains because many users hold BTC exposure outside the native Bitcoin network. Those routes still belong to the BTC exit family even if they are not the cleanest native BTC examples.
When should I prefer USDT over USDC after BTC?
That depends on the next destination network and wallet flow. USDT often aligns with cross-network liquidity and Tron funding habits, while USDC is more often used when Ethereum-style compatibility matters.
Are BTC-to-stable routes mainly about trading or preservation?
Usually preservation. This family is strongest when the real goal is to reduce BTC volatility or prepare a stable landing asset for another transfer, treasury move, or portfolio step.
Related route families
These related families usually sit one decision away from the current cluster. Use them to compare whether the next route should preserve value, end in BTC, or enter another ecosystem instead.
Stablecoin to BTC routes
Use this family when the funding asset starts stable, but the destination needs to end as native Bitcoin with the right send rail and wallet compatibility from the start.
814 total routes | 25 featured now | 789 more in this family
BTC to ecosystem-entry routes
Use this family when the route starts in BTC but the real goal is another native asset ecosystem such as Ethereum, Solana, or BNB Chain.
1027 total routes | 22 featured now | 1005 more in this family
Altcoin to stable routes
Use this family when the route starts in a non-stable ecosystem asset and the destination should finish in USDT, USDC, or another stable landing asset.
2035 total routes | 23 featured now | 2012 more in this family
Ready to open a route?
Move from this family view into the live builder or open one of the top routes above when the pair and network direction are already clear enough to act on.