NEAR → USDT
| # | Casa de cambio | Puntuación | Historial sin KYC? | Tasa | Recibes (1 NEAR) | Límites (NEAR) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
A priv 87trust 70 | 1 NEAR = 1.989042 USDT | 1.989042 USDT | min 3477.39692 · max 596125.186289 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en OctoSwap → | |
| 2 |
|
C priv 48trust 78 | — | 1 NEAR = 1.9808005 USDT | 1.9808005 USDT | min 13.42825468 · max 7394.41336768 | intercambiar en SideShift → | |
| 3 |
|
C priv 61trust 71 | 1 NEAR = 1.9727 USDT | 1.9727 USDT | min 49.677 · max 496770.9885 | intercambiar en notkyc | intercambiar en XMRS → |
Swapping NEAR to USDT is a common move when you want to lock in gains or de-risk after a NEAR rally without leaving the on-chain world. NEAR's sub-second finality and sub-cent fees make the exit cheap and fast, but the destination network for USDT (TRC20, ERC20, BEP20, Solana, or even NEAR itself via bridged Tether) determines what you actually pay and where the funds end up usable. No-KYC routing keeps the exit private.
What makes NEAR -> USDT specific
NEAR settles in roughly 1-2 seconds with fees typically under a cent, so the source side of this swap is rarely the bottleneck. The friction sits on the USDT side: Tether is multi-chain, and the network you pick changes withdrawal cost, downstream usability, and counterparty risk. TRC20 USDT is cheap to move and widely accepted by OTC desks and P2P markets. ERC20 USDT costs more in gas but integrates with the deepest DeFi liquidity. Solana and BEP20 sit in between. Native USDT on NEAR exists but has thinner downstream liquidity, so most aggregator routes will bridge out.
Liquidity for NEAR -> USDT is solid across floating-rate providers because both assets are top-50 by volume. Fixed-rate quotes will be tighter (worse) than floating but protect you from slippage during the 5-30 minute settlement window - relevant if NEAR is moving fast, which is the usual reason you're exiting in the first place.
Choosing a route for this pair
- Match the destination network to where USDT will actually be used - bridging later eats the savings.
- Check min/max bounds: NEAR deposits below ~$20 equivalent often get rejected or eat disproportionate network fees on the receiving side.
- Prefer fixed-rate when NEAR is volatile intraday; floating-rate when the market is calm and you want a better headline number.
- Confirm the refund address policy before sending - some providers require a NEAR refund address up front, others derive it from the deposit.
Practical tips: send a small test amount if this is your first time using a given route, especially for ERC20 destinations where a typo costs gas to recover. Avoid swapping during obvious volatility spikes unless you've locked the rate. If you're exiting a large NEAR position, split it across two or three routes to reduce single-provider exposure and to sample real fill quality rather than trusting the quoted rate.