LINK → DOGE
| # | Casa de cambio | Puntuación | Historial sin KYC? | Tasa | Recibes (1 LINK) | Límites (LINK) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
A priv 87trust 70 | 1 LINK = 102.607545 DOGE | 102.607545 DOGE | min 886.390113 · max 151952.590792 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en OctoSwap → | |
| 2 |
|
D priv 45trust 67 | 1 LINK = 102.11 DOGE | 102.11 DOGE | min 1.2661 · max 862.886 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en FixedFloat → | |
| 3 |
|
C priv 61trust 71 | 1 LINK = 100.5554 DOGE | 100.5554 DOGE | min 12.6627 · max 126627.1589 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en XMRS → | |
| 4 |
|
D priv 40trust 65 | — | 1 LINK = 91.6194058 DOGE | 91.6194058 DOGE | min 0.17268933 | intercambiar en Baltex → | |
| 5 |
|
C priv 49trust 79 | 1 LINK = 91.6059478 DOGE | 91.6059478 DOGE | min 3.81194409 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en StealthEX → |
Swapping LINK to DOGE moves you from an ERC-20 oracle token with utility-driven demand into a UTXO-based memecoin with deep retail liquidity and fast, cheap on-chain transfers. Common reasons: harvesting LINK gains into a tipping/payments asset, funding a Dogecoin address for low-fee transfers, or rotating from a slower-moving infrastructure play into a higher-velocity speculative position. A no-KYC route keeps the swap atomic and avoids exchange custody.
What makes LINK -> DOGE specific
LINK lives primarily on Ethereum as an ERC-20 (with bridged versions on BNB Chain, Polygon, Arbitrum, Base, and others). DOGE runs on its own Litecoin-derived UTXO chain - there is no native 'DOGE on Ethereum'. That means every swap in this pair is genuinely cross-chain: the service has to settle your LINK on whichever EVM network you send from, then broadcast a native Dogecoin transaction to your D-prefixed address.
Practical implications:
- Sending LINK from Ethereum mainnet costs gas in ETH; from Arbitrum or Base it is typically under a dollar.
- Dogecoin block time is ~1 minute, so the receiving leg is usually faster than the LINK-side confirmation wait.
- Liquidity for LINK/DOGE is rarely a direct book - aggregators route through BTC, USDT, or ETH internally, so quoted rates can drift between quote and execution.
Choosing a service for this pair
Things worth checking before you commit:
- Network selection: confirm the LINK network you are sending (ERC-20 vs a bridged variant). Sending bridged LINK to an address expecting ERC-20 is the most common way funds get stuck.
- Rate type: a 'fixed' quote locks the DOGE amount but usually carries a worse rate; 'floating' gives market price at settlement and tends to win on this pair because of the indirect routing.
- Min/max: DOGE-side minimums are often set in USD-equivalent, so small LINK amounts (under ~$30) may be rejected after the fact.
- Refund address: always provide a LINK refund address on the same network you sent from. No-KYC services cannot recover funds without it if the rate window expires.
Tips: verify the Dogecoin destination starts with 'D' and is 34 characters; avoid swapping during high ETH gas spikes if you are sourcing from mainnet; for amounts above a few thousand dollars, split into two transactions to compare realized rates.