SUI → ETH
| # | Exchange | Score | No-KYC record? | Rate | You receive (1 SUI) | Limits (SUI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
A priv 87trust 70 | 1 SUI = 0.000439 ETH | 0.000439 ETH | min 9170.706144 · max 1572121.053321 | swap on notkyc | swap on OctoSwap → | |
| 2 |
|
D priv 45trust 67 | 1 SUI = 0.0004365 ETH | 0.0004365 ETH | min 13.185 · max 12057.938 | swap on notkyc | swap on FixedFloat → | |
| 3 |
|
C priv 48trust 78 | — | 1 SUI = 0.00043034 ETH | 0.00043034 ETH | min 3.93189393 · max 39318.93929964 | swap on SideShift → | |
| 4 |
|
C priv 61trust 71 | 1 SUI = 0.0004 ETH | 0.0004 ETH | min 131.0615 · max 1310615.9895 | swap on notkyc | swap on XMRS → | |
| 5 |
|
D priv 40trust 65 | — | 1 SUI = 0.00036728 ETH | 0.00036728 ETH | min 0.66056246 | swap on Baltex → |
Swapping SUI to ETH bridges two fundamentally different execution models: Sui's object-centric Move runtime with parallel transaction processing, and Ethereum's account-based EVM. Holders typically rotate into ETH to access deeper DeFi liquidity, use it as collateral on major lending markets, pay L2 gas, or park value in the most liquid smart-contract asset. A no-KYC route keeps the swap atomic - no account, no document upload, no withdrawal hold.
SUI -> ETH: what makes this pair specific
SUI and ETH live on incompatible chains. There is no native bridge between them in a single transaction, so every aggregator route under the hood does a market swap: SUI gets sold on a venue that holds inventory of both assets, and ETH is sent to your Ethereum address (or an L2 like Arbitrum, Base, or Optimism if the service supports it). Sui finality is sub-second and fees are fractions of a cent, so the SUI deposit leg is fast and cheap. The ETH payout leg inherits Ethereum mainnet gas conditions - if you choose mainnet during congestion, the service absorbs higher network fees and usually prices that into the quoted rate.
Liquidity for SUI/ETH is solid on tier-1 venues but thinner than SUI/USDT or ETH/USDT, so larger orders may show wider spreads. Most no-KYC desks route through a USDT or USDC hop internally, which is why quotes can differ by 1-3% across providers for the same input.
What to check before sending
- Destination network: confirm the service is sending to Ethereum L1 vs an L2 - they are not interchangeable and a wrong selection can mean lost funds or expensive bridging.
- Rate type: a 'floating' quote follows the market until execution; a 'fixed' quote locks a number but adds a spread of roughly 0.5-1.5%.
- Min/max: SUI minimums are usually low (a few dollars) but ETH-side minimums sometimes bind because of gas economics.
- Refund address: always provide a Sui refund address - if the deposit arrives outside the rate-lock window, refunds without one get stuck in support queues.
Practical tips: avoid swapping during Ethereum gas spikes (check basefee before confirming), split large orders to test the route, and if you plan to use ETH on an L2, request payout directly to that L2 when supported - it saves a bridging step and the associated fees.