USDT is the most-held stablecoin, but it's fully traceable — every transfer is public on Ethereum or Tron. Swapping it into Monero is how people take a stable balance private, and you can do it on 0trace with no account and no ID.
Pick the right USDT network
USDT lives on several chains. On 0trace you can send Tether as ERC-20 (Ethereum) or TRC-20 (Tron), among others. TRC-20 is usually cheaper and faster to send; ERC-20 is the most widely supported. Choose the one your funds are already on — sending on the wrong network loses the deposit.
The swap, step by step
- Set the top field to USDT and pick its network (ERC-20 or TRC-20).
- Set the bottom field to Monero.
- Enter an amount — the rate is a live float, quoted on our side.
- Paste your Monero address and create the order.
- Send the exact USDT amount to the address shown, within the roughly 30-minute window on the order.
- Once the deposit confirms, the Monero payout goes out automatically.
Fees and timing
Two costs, shown before you confirm: our service fee (built into the rate) and the network fee for the Monero payout. TRC-20 deposits confirm fast; ERC-20 depends on Ethereum. The Monero side is quick once the deposit lands.
What to watch for
- Match the network — USDT on Tron is not USDT on Ethereum. Send on the network you selected.
- Send the exact amount so the automatic payout matches.
- Use a Monero wallet you control, and check the first and last characters of the address.
- The rate floats, so the receive figure can move slightly by settlement.
Why Monero
Tether can be frozen and every USDT address is watchable. Monero hides amounts and addresses by default, so once you're in XMR the trail from your stable balance is broken.