TRX → BNB
| # | Casa de cambio | Puntuación | Historial sin KYC? | Tasa | Recibes (1 TRX) | Límites (TRX) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
C priv 61trust 71 | 1 TRX = 0.0006 BNB | 0.0006 BNB | min 312.0124 · max 3120124.8049 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en XMRS → | |
| 2 |
|
D priv 45trust 67 | 1 TRX = 0.000562 BNB | 0.000562 BNB | min 21 · max 240362.839 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en FixedFloat → | |
| 3 |
|
C priv 48trust 78 | — | 1 TRX = 0.00055371 BNB | 0.00055371 BNB | min 9.357455 · max 187149.095446 | intercambiar en SideShift → | |
| 4 |
|
C priv 49trust 79 | 1 TRX = 0.0004871 BNB | 0.0004871 BNB | min 0.273094 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en StealthEX → |
Swapping TRX to BNB usually means one thing: you are moving liquidity off Tron and into the BNB Chain ecosystem - whether to access PancakeSwap pools, BSC-based yield farms, BEP20 tokens, or BNB-paired perps. Both chains are cheap and fast, so the swap itself is rarely the bottleneck. What matters is finding a no-KYC route that locks a fair rate, accepts the network you actually hold (TRC20 TRX, BEP20 BNB), and refunds cleanly if quotes drift.
Why TRX -> BNB Specifically
TRX lives natively on Tron, where block times sit around 3 seconds and transfer fees are effectively zero once you have bandwidth or staked TRX. BNB is the gas token of BNB Smart Chain (BEP20) and Beacon Chain (BEP2), with ~3 second blocks and sub-cent fees. Both networks are high-throughput, so end-to-end swap times are typically 2-5 minutes once confirmations clear - far faster than anything routed through Bitcoin or Ethereum L1.
Common reasons people run this pair:
- Exiting Tron-based USDT positions indirectly (sell USDT-TRC20 -> TRX -> BNB) to enter BSC DeFi
- Funding a BEP20 wallet for PancakeSwap, Venus, or new token launches
- Consolidating idle TRX held from JustLend or SunSwap activity into a more widely-paired asset
- Avoiding the higher gas of ETH-based bridges between ecosystems
What to Check Before Confirming
Network selection is the first trap. BNB exists as both BEP20 (Smart Chain) and BEP2 (Beacon Chain, mostly deprecated). Confirm the destination address format matches what the aggregator quote assumes - sending BEP2 to a BEP20-only wallet is recoverable but painful. TRX has no such ambiguity; it is always native Tron.
Other things worth checking:
- Floating vs fixed rate: floating gives better mid-market pricing, fixed protects you if TRX or BNB moves during the 10-30 minute window
- Min/max thresholds - TRX swaps often have higher minimums in TRX terms because the unit price is low
- Refund address field: always populate it. If the deposit arrives outside the rate-lock window, you want it back on Tron without a support ticket
- No-KYC limits: some routes silently flag larger swaps for review. Splitting one large TRX deposit into two can avoid friction
Time the swap when both networks are uncongested (BSC mempool spikes during Asian-hours token launches), and verify the receiving BNB address character-by-character - BEP20 addresses share the 0x format with ETH, making copy-paste errors easy to miss.