AVAX → APT
| # | Exchange | Score | No-KYC record? | Rate | You receive (1 AVAX) | Limits (AVAX) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
A priv 87trust 70 | 1 AVAX = 11.075511 APT | 11.075511 APT | min 1017.589766 · max 174443.959878 | swap on notkyc | swap on OctoSwap → | |
| 2 |
|
D priv 45trust 67 | 1 AVAX = 11.016 APT | 11.016 APT | min 0.1465 · max 797.6818 | swap on notkyc | swap on FixedFloat → | |
| 3 |
|
D priv 40trust 65 | — | 1 AVAX = 10.9732493 APT | 10.9732493 APT | min 0.00123432 | swap on Baltex → | |
| 4 |
|
C priv 49trust 79 | 1 AVAX = 10.917966 APT | 10.917966 APT | min 0.0012221 | swap on notkyc | swap on StealthEX → | |
| 5 |
|
C priv 48trust 78 | — | 1 AVAX = 10.87280782 APT | 10.87280782 APT | min 0.43617331 · max 1072.19380206 | swap on SideShift → | |
| 6 |
|
C priv 61trust 71 | 1 AVAX = 10.854 APT | 10.854 APT | min 14.5369 · max 145369.9665 | swap on notkyc | swap on XMRS → |
Swapping AVAX to APT moves you between two distinct high-throughput L1 architectures: Avalanche's EVM-compatible C-Chain with subnet flexibility, and Aptos's Move-based parallel execution engine. There's no native bridge route that's both fast and trustless, so most users rely on swap aggregators to handle the cross-VM hop in one transaction. Doing it without KYC keeps your wallet history off centralized identity ledgers and avoids exchange withdrawal queues.
AVAX -> APT: what makes this pair specific
AVAX and APT are not bridge-compatible in any direct sense. AVAX C-Chain is EVM (Solidity, secp256k1 addresses starting 0x), while Aptos uses the Move VM with Ed25519 keys and 32-byte addresses. You cannot send AVAX to an Aptos address or vice versa - any swap requires an intermediary that holds liquidity on both chains. Block finality is roughly 1-2 seconds on Avalanche C-Chain and sub-second on Aptos, so end-to-end swap times are usually bottlenecked by the aggregator's internal confirmation thresholds, not the chains themselves.
Typical flows for this pair: rotating out of Avalanche DeFi positions into Aptos-native protocols (Thala, Echelon, LiquidSwap), accumulating APT for staking, or repositioning across ecosystems without routing through a CEX. Liquidity for AVAX-APT is thinner than majors-to-majors, so rate spreads between providers can be wider than usual - comparing live quotes matters more here.
What to check before sending
- Network selection: confirm AVAX is sent on C-Chain, not X-Chain or a subnet. Sending to a P-Chain or X-Chain address will not be recoverable by most swap services.
- APT address format: a valid Aptos address is 32 bytes (64 hex chars), often prefixed 0x. Some wallets display shortened forms - paste the full string.
- Rate-lock type: floating rates track the market until execution; fixed rates lock at quote time but quote a worse number. For a volatile pair like this, fixed is safer on amounts above a few hundred dollars.
- Min/max limits: AVAX-APT minimums tend to sit higher than BTC or ETH pairs because of liquidity routing.
- Refund address: always set a C-Chain refund address you control, in case the deposit falls outside the quoted window.
Practical tip: avoid swapping during Aptos validator set rotations or major Avalanche subnet events when RPC nodes can lag. Split large amounts into two transactions to test the route first.