What is an off-ramp?
An off-ramp is the step where crypto value becomes local currency. For example, USDC may need to become BRL, KRW, MXN, PHP, NGN, or another currency through an exchange, local partner, P2P market, or payout route.
The off-ramp cost stack
| Cost | Meaning | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Trading fee | Fee to buy, sell, or convert crypto. | Small percentages can matter on larger amounts. |
| Market spread | Difference between buy and sell price. | Poor liquidity can reduce receive amount. |
| Network fee | Blockchain transaction fee. | Varies by chain and congestion. |
| Withdrawal fee | Exchange/platform withdrawal cost. | Can be fixed and painful for small transfers. |
| Local payout fee | Fee to reach bank, PIX, wallet, or cash. | This is where “cheap crypto transfer” can become expensive. |
Stablecoin does not mean zero cost
Stablecoins can reduce volatility against USD, but they do not remove every cost. Users still face exchange spreads, withdrawal limits, local liquidity, KYC requirements, and off-ramp fees.
When off-ramp routes are attractive
- Stablecoin liquidity is strong.
- The receiver already has exchange access.
- Local payout is fast and cheap.
- The user understands network selection and compliance checks.
When they are risky
- The route requires many manual steps.
- The user might choose the wrong blockchain network.
- Liquidity is thin.
- Local withdrawals are delayed or limited.
Important: TransferIQ shows estimates only. Costs, limits, payout availability, crypto liquidity, network fees, taxes, KYC requirements, and provider quotes can change. Always verify the official quote or market price before sending money, trading, or using a crypto route.
Compare the route before choosing the provider
TransferIQ is built to compare estimated receive amounts across traditional remittance, FX, crypto market, stablecoin off-ramp, and local payout routes.
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