← all services

SUI XRP

rate type
Market-rate quotes (may change before execution).
root@notkyc:~$ rates cached for everyone · ttl 60s · 0s
# Exchange Score No-KYC record? Rate You receive (1 SUI) Limits (SUI)
1 OctoSwap BEST A priv 87trust 70
// no on-platform swaps yet
1 SUI = 0.675773 XRP 0.675773 XRP min 9175.514484 · max 1572945.340149 swap on notkyc swap on OctoSwap →
2 FixedFloat D priv 45trust 67
0/1 KYC-free
1 SUI = 0.6723 XRP 0.6723 XRP min 1.319 · max 12057.938 swap on notkyc swap on FixedFloat →
3 SideShift C priv 48trust 78 1 SUI = 0.66284013 XRP 0.66284013 XRP min 3.93318286 · max 14035.30424004 swap on SideShift →
4 XMRS C priv 61trust 71
6/6 KYC-free
1 SUI = 0.662 XRP 0.662 XRP min 131.0959 · max 1310959.6224 swap on notkyc swap on XMRS →
5 Baltex D priv 40trust 65 1 SUI = 0.653464 XRP 0.653464 XRP min 0.05515287 swap on Baltex →
OctoSwap BEST A
Rate1 SUI = 0.675773 XRP
You receive0.675773 XRP
Limitsmin 9175.514484 · max 1572945.340149 SUI
Rate1 SUI = 0.6723 XRP
You receive0.6723 XRP
Limitsmin 1.319 · max 12057.938 SUI
Rate1 SUI = 0.66284013 XRP
You receive0.66284013 XRP
Limitsmin 3.93318286 · max 14035.30424004 SUI
Rate1 SUI = 0.662 XRP
You receive0.662 XRP
Limitsmin 131.0959 · max 1310959.6224 SUI
Rate1 SUI = 0.653464 XRP
You receive0.653464 XRP
Limitsmin 0.05515287 SUI

Swapping SUI to XRP moves you from a young Move-based L1 with sub-second finality into one of the oldest payment-focused ledgers still in active use. Common reasons: locking gains from SUI's higher-volatility cycles into XRP for cheaper cross-border settlement, freeing up capital for XRPL-based DEX activity, or consolidating into a more liquid asset ahead of fiat off-ramp. Doing it without KYC keeps the route fast and your wallet history off centralized databases.

// about this pair

SUI -> XRP: what makes this pair specific

SUI runs on its own object-based Move chain with roughly 400ms checkpoint finality and gas paid in SUI. XRP settles on the XRP Ledger in 3-5 seconds with a fixed fee measured in drops (fractions of a cent) and requires a 10 XRP reserve on any new account. There is no bridge or wrapped representation that matters here - every swap is a true cross-chain trade, with the aggregator routing through a service that holds inventory on both chains.

Liquidity is asymmetric. XRP has deep order books across most venues, so the XRP leg rarely slips. SUI liquidity is thinner outside of peak hours, which is where rate spreads between providers widen. Comparing 5-10 quotes on the same refresh tends to surface 0.3-1.2% differences on mid-size orders.

Choosing a route and sizing the swap

  • Confirm the destination is an XRPL address (r... format) and include the destination tag if your receiving wallet or exchange requires one - missing tags are the most common cause of stuck XRP deposits.
  • Check the SUI deposit network - it must be native SUI, not a wrapped variant on another chain.
  • Prefer float rates for better pricing if you can broadcast within the quote window; pick fixed rates if SUI is moving fast and you need certainty.
  • Verify the minimum (often around 5-10 USD equivalent in SUI) and the no-KYC ceiling, which typically sits between 1-2 BTC equivalent before a provider may flag the order.
  • Read the refund policy: if the rate expires mid-transit, some routes refund in SUI minus network fees, others auto-execute at the new rate.

Practical tip: fund the new XRPL account with at least 11-12 XRP on the first deposit to clear the reserve and leave room for a transaction. For larger sizes, split into two transfers and compare quotes again between them - SUI/USD can move enough in 10 minutes to change which provider is cheapest.

// FAQ
Do I need a destination tag when receiving XRP?
Only if the receiving wallet requires one. Personal self-custody wallets like Xaman generally do not need a tag for incoming transfers to your own r-address. Centralized exchanges almost always require a destination tag - omitting it usually means the deposit lands in their hot wallet uncredited and recovery requires a support ticket.
Why does my new XRP address need a 10 XRP reserve?
The XRP Ledger requires every account to hold a base reserve (currently 10 XRP) to discourage ledger spam. That amount is locked but not lost - it stays with the account. If your swap output is below the reserve, the transaction will fail. Send at least 11 XRP on the first deposit to a fresh address.
Is there a direct SUI to XRP bridge?
No. SUI and XRPL are independent chains with no canonical bridge. Every SUI -> XRP swap is executed by a counterparty that takes SUI on the Sui network and pays out XRP from inventory on the XRPL. That is why rates and limits vary between providers - each one manages its own two-sided liquidity.
How long does a SUI to XRP swap take end to end?
Typical completion is 2-5 minutes. SUI confirms in under a second, XRPL settles in 3-5 seconds, and the rest is the provider's internal processing and any required confirmation depth on the SUI deposit. Expect longer waits during high SUI network load or if the provider batches outgoing XRP payouts.
Fixed rate or float rate for this pair?
Float is usually 0.3-0.8% cheaper because the provider does not price in volatility insurance. Choose float when both chains are uncongested and you can send the SUI immediately after locking the quote. Choose fixed if SUI is mid-move or you are sending from a slower wallet flow where the quote could expire in transit.
Will swapping SUI to XRP without KYC trigger any flags?
The swap itself is non-custodial from your side - you send SUI, you receive XRP at an address you control. Flags can appear later if you deposit that XRP into a KYC venue that screens incoming addresses. If off-ramping is the goal, check the receiving exchange's policy on funds sourced from swap services before sending.
// related