Route family
Stablecoin routes that land in BTC
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.
Total routes:814
Featured now:25
Mapped next:789
Curated seeds:4
What this route family covers
These routes typically start from USDT or USDC and finish on native Bitcoin. The main difference is not only the asset pair, but the network that carries the deposit into the route before BTC settlement begins.
That makes this family useful when the user already holds stablecoins, wants a direct BTC position, and still needs to decide whether fee-first routing, ERC20 compatibility, or another network context should shape the send side.
How to compare routes in this family
Choose the stablecoin family first
USDT and USDC dominate this family, but they do not always serve the same wallet flows or transfer habits before the BTC destination is reached.
Then compare the send rail
The key difference is usually Tron vs ERC20 vs another supported rail. Cost, wallet support, and exchange withdrawal options all change before BTC settlement starts.
Keep the BTC destination fixed
Most decisions in this family happen on the funding side. The destination stays Bitcoin-focused, so the send asset and send network carry most of the route nuance.
Representative stablecoin to BTC routes
These examples show the most useful comparisons inside this family: fee-first stablecoin paths, compatibility-first ERC20 paths, and alternative rails that still end in a Bitcoin destination.
USDT
BTC
Useful when the user wants to rotate from USDT into BTC as a more durable store-of-value route while keeping the flow wallet-native.
Tron (TRC20) → Bitcoin
USDT
BTC
Useful when the user wants to rotate from USDT into BTC as a more durable store-of-value route while keeping the flow wallet-native.
Ethereum (ERC20) → Bitcoin
USDT
BTC
Useful when the user wants to rotate from USDT into BTC as a more durable store-of-value route while keeping the flow wallet-native.
BNB Chain (BEP20) → Bitcoin
USDC
BTC
Useful when the user wants to rotate from USDC into BTC as a more durable store-of-value route while keeping the flow wallet-native.
Ethereum → Bitcoin
USDC
BTC
Useful when the user wants to rotate from USDC into BTC as a more durable store-of-value route while keeping the flow wallet-native.
Polygon → Bitcoin
USDC
BTC
Useful when the user wants to rotate from USDC into BTC as a more durable store-of-value route while keeping the flow wallet-native.
Arbitrum → Bitcoin
USDC
BTC
Useful when the user wants to rotate from USDC into BTC as a more durable store-of-value route while keeping the flow wallet-native.
Base → Bitcoin
USDC
BTC
Useful when the user wants to rotate from USDC into BTC as a more durable store-of-value route while keeping the flow wallet-native.
BNB Chain (BEP20) → Bitcoin
USDC
BTC
Useful when the user wants to rotate from USDC into BTC as a more durable store-of-value route while keeping the flow wallet-native.
Solana → Bitcoin
Stable funding assets
These are the stable assets most often used to fund BTC destinations inside this route family.
Common stablecoin send rails
The send-side network usually creates the most meaningful difference between one stable-to-BTC route and another.
Common BTC landing networks
Most routes still end on Bitcoin, but wrapped or ecosystem-specific BTC destinations also appear in the broader family graph.
Stable-to-BTC family FAQ
Why does the funding network matter so much in stable-to-BTC routes?
Because the biggest route difference often happens before Bitcoin settlement starts. Tron, ERC20, and other rails change transfer cost, wallet compatibility, and how easy it is to fund the route from the current wallet or exchange.
Should I compare USDT and USDC separately in this family?
Yes. They can look similar at the pair level, but they behave differently across supported networks, wallet habits, and exchange withdrawal paths, so it makes sense to compare both family and rail.
Does every route here end in native BTC?
No. Native BTC is the clearest destination in this family, but wrapped BTC variants can appear in the broader route graph. The destination network and asset still need to match the exact route you open.
What is the main decision order for stable-to-BTC routes?
First choose the stablecoin you already hold, then compare the send network, and only after that narrow down the exact BTC destination route that matches your wallet expectations.
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.
BTC to stable routes
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.
814 total routes | 13 featured now | 801 more in this family
Stablecoin to ecosystem-entry routes
Use this family when the funding asset stays stable at the start, but the destination should become a native ecosystem asset such as ETH, SOL, or BNB.
2072 total routes | 24 featured now | 2048 more in this family
Altcoin to BTC routes
Use this family when the route starts from a non-Bitcoin asset and the destination should settle as native Bitcoin.
69 total routes | 7 featured now | 62 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.