Layerswap

USDC0USDC · Ethereum
USDC0.0USDC · Arbitrum
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NetworksEthereumArbitrumOptimismBasezkSyncLinea

Live preview — open the official Layerswap app from your own wallet.

Official app: layerswap.io/appQuote fee breakdownWallet and exchange routes

What is Layerswap?

Layerswap is a cross-chain asset bridging and swapping app for moving tokens between supported networks and exchange routes. The official docs describe fast token swapping across 70+ blockchains and direct transfers between chains and supported exchanges.

Layerswap at a glance

CategoryCross-chain bridge and swap service
Network70+ blockchains plus supported exchanges
TokenNo native token advertised
CustodyWallet-based transfers with route-specific settlement

Layerswap fees and bridge costs

Layerswap costs depend on route, asset, network gas, exchange withdrawal conditions, and the service fee shown in the quote. The product is built for cross-chain transfers and direct exchange-to-chain movements, so users should not compare only the displayed bridge fee; the full cost includes source-chain gas, destination-chain gas or funding, slippage for swap routes, and any centralized exchange withdrawal fee. Before confirming, Layerswap shows the source, destination, token, expected output, and timing. For high-value transfers, compare the same route against a native bridge or another bridge aggregator before sending.

Layerswap supported networks and exchanges

Layerswap is searched often because it supports routes that ordinary bridges may skip, including transfers between blockchains, wallets, and selected centralized exchanges. Its docs describe support for 70+ blockchains and 15+ exchanges, with networks changing as integrations are added or retired. Common search intent includes Base, Arbitrum, zkSync, Starknet, Linea, Immutable zkEVM, Optimism, Ethereum, and Solana routes. The safest way to confirm support is to select the exact source, destination, and token in the app because availability is route-specific.

How to bridge from Coinbase or Binance with Layerswap

Layerswap is often used for exchange-to-wallet transfers because it can turn a centralized exchange withdrawal into a direct deposit on a target chain. The usual flow is to choose the exchange as the source, pick the destination network and wallet address, generate the deposit instructions, and send the exact asset and amount from the exchange. Accuracy matters: sending the wrong token, wrong network, or mismatched amount can delay or fail the transfer. Users should keep the Layerswap transfer page open until the transaction is detected.

Layerswap limits and transfer time

Layerswap limits vary by route, token, liquidity, and exchange support. A small stablecoin transfer to a major L2 can be quick, while a transfer involving an exchange withdrawal, a less common network, or route liquidity checks may take longer. The app quote is the source of truth for minimums, maximums, estimated time, and expected output. Searchers asking about a stuck transfer should check whether the source transaction has confirmed, whether the exact amount was sent, and whether the destination chain requires extra finality.

How to swap Layerswap

  1. Open the appUse the official app URL, then select a route before connecting or approving anything.
  2. Choose the routePick the source token and network, then choose the destination token and network or supported exchange path.
  3. Review the quoteCheck the receive amount, route limits, service fee, bridge expenses, and any market impact shown for the route.
  4. Confirm and trackApprove in your wallet, submit the transfer, and follow status in the app or official explorer.

Ready to swap?

Open the official Layerswap app and verify the domain before you sign.

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Layerswap vs other bridge routes

DimensionLayerswapAlternative bridge
Route focusWallet, chain, and exchange transfersUsually wallet-to-wallet or native bridge only
Network coverageBroad, including newer L2s and appchainsVaries by bridge
Best use caseCEX to L2 deposits and unusual routesNative withdrawals or deep liquidity routes
Risk checkExact deposit instructions and route limitsBridge contract and liquidity risk

Layerswap FAQ

Does Layerswap support centralized exchanges?

Yes. Layerswap is known for direct transfer flows between supported exchanges and blockchains. The exact exchange, asset, and destination network must be selected in the app because support is not universal. Users should follow the generated deposit instructions exactly and avoid manually changing the amount or network.

Why is my Layerswap transfer pending?

A Layerswap transfer can stay pending while the source transaction confirms, the exchange releases the withdrawal, or the destination route waits for finality. The most important checks are the source transaction hash, exact amount sent, selected asset, and whether the destination wallet address matches the order.

Can I bridge to Starknet with Layerswap?

Layerswap has historically been a popular route for Starknet deposits and withdrawals, but live support depends on the selected token and source. Users should verify Starknet availability inside the app before sending funds, because bridge routes can change based on network upgrades, liquidity, and partner availability.

Does Layerswap have a token?

Layerswap does not advertise a native token as a requirement for using its bridge. Users should be cautious about tokens or airdrop claims pretending to be official unless they are confirmed through Layerswap's official website, docs, X account, or support channels.

What happens if I send the wrong amount to Layerswap?

A wrong amount can delay matching or require support review because many Layerswap orders are tied to exact deposit instructions. If the transaction is already sent, users should save the order ID, source transaction hash, asset, amount, and destination address before contacting support.

Is Layerswap cheaper than a native bridge?

Not always. Layerswap can be cheaper or faster for certain exchange-to-L2 and L2-to-L2 routes, but native bridges may be better for direct canonical deposits or withdrawals. The fair comparison is total expected output after service fees, gas, exchange withdrawal fees, and waiting time.