NEAR → SUI
| # | Casa de cambio | Puntuación | Historial sin KYC? | Tasa | Recibes (1 NEAR) | Límites (NEAR) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
A priv 87trust 70 | 1 NEAR = 2.674194 SUI | 2.674194 SUI | min 3456.960838 · max 592621.85787 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en OctoSwap → | |
| 2 |
|
C priv 48trust 78 | — | 1 NEAR = 2.63156375 SUI | 2.63156375 SUI | min 1.4769203 · max 5814.79251444 | intercambiar en SideShift → | |
| 3 |
|
C priv 61trust 71 | 1 NEAR = 2.6204 SUI | 2.6204 SUI | min 49.3851 · max 493851.5482 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en XMRS → | |
| 4 |
|
D priv 40trust 65 | — | 1 NEAR = 2.5183151 SUI | 2.5183151 SUI | min 0.10943441 | intercambiar en Baltex → |
Swapping NEAR to SUI moves you between two newer L1s with very different architectures: NEAR's sharded Nightshade chain with human-readable accounts, and Sui's object-centric Move-based runtime with parallel execution. Both settle in seconds and cost fractions of a cent, so a no-KYC swap here is usually about repositioning into Sui's DeFi and gaming ecosystem (Cetus, Suilend, NAVI) without touching a centralized account or routing through wrapped assets on Ethereum.
What makes NEAR -> SUI specific
NEAR and SUI are not bridge-compatible in any native sense. There is no canonical NEAR<>SUI bridge, so every swap is effectively a sell-side disposal of NEAR followed by a buy-side acquisition of SUI on the aggregator's routing layer. That means the rate you see depends heavily on liquidity depth on both legs at the moment of quote, not on a single AMM pool.
Both chains are fast (NEAR ~1.2s finality, Sui ~400ms checkpoint commit) and cheap, so on-chain confirmation is rarely the bottleneck. The slow step is the provider's internal processing and any rate-lock window. Send NEAR to a fresh implicit or named account address; receive SUI to a 0x-prefixed 32-byte address. Sending SUI to a NEAR-style address (or vice versa) is unrecoverable on most providers.
Choosing a provider for this pair
- Confirm the deposit network is NEAR mainnet (not Aurora, NEAR's EVM layer - Aurora NEAR is a different asset path).
- Check that the SUI payout is on Sui mainnet, not a wrapped SUI on Ethereum or BSC.
- Compare floating vs fixed rates: floating usually wins on this pair because both assets are liquid, but fixed protects you if NEAR is mid-move.
- Read the refund policy and refund-address field - some providers void refunds if you skip it.
- Note min/max: NEAR mins are often ~1-2 NEAR, Sui-side caps depend on hot wallet depth.
Practical tips: split large amounts (>5k USD equivalent) into two transfers to avoid quote slippage on the SUI leg. Avoid swapping during NEAR validator epoch transitions or major Sui protocol upgrades when mempool behavior is irregular. Always verify the receiving Sui address character-by-character - Move addresses have no checksum like EVM EIP-55.