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Route overview
This route is built for users moving from USDT on Tron (TRC20) into USDC on Arbitrum when they want to preserve stable value while changing the settlement rail or destination stablecoin network.
Route note: this page is prefilled with USDT on Tron (TRC20), while USDT is currently supported across 9 send networks on ZyroShift.
Route profile
Useful when the user wants to move stable value from Tron (TRC20) into USDC on Arbitrum without first leaving the non-custodial flow.
Send
USDT on Tron (TRC20)
Receive
USDC on Arbitrum
Live swap card
Current rate
Select a valid pair to fetch a live variable rate
You send
You receive
Live unit rate
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Current live rate before the shift is created.
Deposit rule
[warning] Select a pair to see the live min and max deposit range before you create the shift.
Status note
After you create the order, the app redirects to a dedicated shift screen with the QR code, countdown, waiting state, and live status polling.
Live route context
Send
USDT on Tron (TRC20)
The route starts with the exact deposit asset and network selected for this page.
Receive
USDC on Arbitrum
Settlement is sent to the destination asset and network defined by this route.
Timing
Provider-driven
Processing time depends on deposit detection, blockchain confirmations, route processing, and final settlement on Arbitrum.
Deposit limits
Live minimums
Even with a stablecoin deposit asset, live minimums and maximums still depend on the selected route and destination network, so confirm the range again on the shift page before sending funds.
How this swap works
Choose USDT on Tron (TRC20) as the asset you send and USDC on Arbitrum as the asset you receive.
Enter the USDC receiving address before creating the shift so settlement has a defined destination.
Create the shift, then send USDT on the exact Tron (TRC20) route shown on the shift page within the allowed deposit range.
Track the route until USDC settlement is completed on the dedicated status screen.
Route-specific notes
This route is commonly used when stable value needs to move from Tron (TRC20) into USDC on Arbitrum without leaving a wallet-native flow.
Tron is commonly used for lower-cost stablecoin transfers compared with ERC20 routes.
Stablecoin routes are network-sensitive, so the selected path must match the exact deposit and settlement chain shown on the shift page.
USDC exists on multiple networks, so the receiving wallet must match the selected destination chain exactly.
Related routes
Reverse route
Looking for the reverse path?
Move in the opposite direction while keeping the same pair context available from a dedicated route page.
Reverse the flow and move from USDC back into USDT with the opposite route direction.
Another route that still settles into BTC, with a different send asset or deposit network before Bitcoin delivery completes.
Land in the same destination asset through a different source route, useful when the starting wallet or source network changes.
Use this route when the exact asset pair matters more than broad BTC, stable-value, or meme-family positioning. This profile is generally associated with capital deployment from stable liquidity rather than with de-risking from an existing volatile holding. This profile is generally associated with reducing volatility, preserving value, or preparing funds for a later transfer.
Another route that still settles into BTC, with a different send asset or deposit network before Bitcoin delivery completes.
Explore tokens and networks
Pair FAQ
This route is often used when the goal is to keep value in a stable asset while switching the settlement network, destination wallet environment, or stablecoin rail.
The minimum is provider-driven and route-specific. Always use the live builder and the shift page as the final source of truth before sending funds.
Processing time depends on deposit detection, blockchain confirmations, route processing, and final settlement on Arbitrum.
Deposits below the allowed range can fail to settle normally and may require provider-side handling, so the live deposit rule should always be checked before sending.
Very important. USDT can exist on multiple networks, so the shift page instructions and selected route must be matched exactly before you send funds.
Yes. You should have a compatible USDC receiving address on Arbitrum before you create the shift, because settlement is sent to the exact destination you provide.
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 USDT to USDC, the live builder and shift page remain the final source of truth.