The four-step stablecoin route
- Acquire the stablecoin.
- Send it on the correct blockchain network.
- Sell or convert it into the target currency.
- Withdraw to bank, PIX, wallet, cash, or another payout method.
| Step | Possible cost | Common beginner mistake |
|---|---|---|
| Buy stablecoin | Trading fee and spread. | Assuming 1 USDC always equals exactly 1 USD after fees. |
| Send on-chain | Network fee or withdrawal fee. | Choosing the wrong chain or unsupported deposit network. |
| Sell locally | Market spread and liquidity cost. | Ignoring poor local order books or P2P rates. |
| Withdraw | Bank, PIX, wallet, or payout fee. | Forgetting local payout limits and compliance checks. |
USDC vs USDT is not the only question
The network, exchange, corridor, liquidity, and off-ramp partner often matter more than the ticker. A USDC route on one network can be excellent while the same asset on another route may be impractical.
How TransferIQ treats stablecoin routes
TransferIQ separates the idea of crypto transfer from final payout. The goal is to estimate what the receiver may actually get after the complete route, not just show a blockchain transaction fee.
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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