This page walks through practical steps, fees, and pitfalls for moving crypto between centralized exchanges and a mobile software wallet (Trust Wallet is used as the example receiving wallet). I use these transfers daily and have made plenty of mistakes along the way, so this guide reflects hands-on testing and common rescue patterns. Want to transfer crypto between services safely? Read on. (Yes, read the checklist first.)
If you need a refresher on receiving addresses in the app, see Find address & receive and Send & receive.
This is one of the top searches: "how to send crypto from binance to trust wallet." Here is a practical, device-agnostic workflow.
A few hands-on notes: I always paste the address into a notepad and compare the first/last four characters before sending. And I usually send a tiny test first.
For a quick visual how-to, check the send-receive page.
Yes, you can transfer from Crypto.com to Trust Wallet if the token and network are supported by both platforms. The steps are the same in principle as above: get the receive address in Trust Wallet, then initiate a withdrawal from Crypto.com. But expect a few practical differences:
If you want a focused walkthrough, see Transfer — Crypto.com and Troubleshooting token not showing.
Send ETH to Trust Wallet from exchange? Yes — just double-check whether the exchange is offering ETH on a Layer 2 or as wrapped tokens. If unsure, stick with Ethereum Mainnet.
People search "fee from binance to trust wallet" and "transfer bnb to trust wallet fee" expecting a fixed number. There isn't one fixed fee. The total cost is usually:
Exchange withdrawal fee (set by the exchange) + on-chain gas paid to miners/validators.
Which means fees vary by token and network congestion. The exchange will show the withdrawal fee and estimated arrival time on the withdrawal screen. Use the exchange preview — it’s your best source for the actual cost. For deeper reading on gas mechanics, see Gas fees & optimization and Fees explained.
| Transfer factor | What it affects |
|---|---|
| Network chosen (ERC-20 vs BEP20 vs BTC) | Relative cost and speed (Ethereum often higher gas than BNB) |
| Exchange withdrawal fee | Flat fee the exchange charges for that token |
| Network congestion | Higher gas, slower confirmations |
| Memo/tag requirement | Could require manual recovery if omitted |
If you lose access to the app, see Lost phone recovery and Backup & recovery for the proper recovery flow.
And take a breath if something looks off. But act quickly if you made a mistake — faster help may reduce losses.
Who this helps: beginners and intermediate users moving assets between exchanges and a mobile software wallet for everyday DeFi activity, staking, and swaps. I believe this covers the common flows most users need.
Who should look elsewhere: if you need cold storage for very large holdings, consider hardware options and see Ledger & hardware. If an exchange doesn't support external withdrawals for a token, you'll need to use a different service or trade to a supported asset before withdrawing.
Q: Is it safe to keep crypto in a hot wallet? A: Hot wallets are convenient for daily DeFi use but carry higher risk than hardware wallets. Use small balances for daily activity and keep the bulk in cold storage. See Security features.
Q: How do I revoke token approvals after connecting to a dApp? A: Use the steps in Revoke token approvals & allowances — doing this periodically reduces smart contract risk.
Q: What happens if I lose my phone? A: Restore from your seed phrase on a new device. If you didn’t back up the seed phrase, recovery is extremely difficult. See Seed phrase backup and Lost phone recovery.
Q: How long does a transfer take from Binance to Trust Wallet? A: It depends on the network and confirmations required. Bitcoin can take longer; EVM-compatible chains are typically faster.
Transferring crypto between exchanges and a mobile software wallet is routine but requires care: match networks, check memos, and test with small amounts. If you want step-by-step setup for receiving addresses, see Find address & receive. For chain-specific transfer walkthroughs, visit Transfer — Binance and Transfer — Crypto.com.
If you did a test transfer and it worked, you’re ready to move larger amounts with more confidence. Need help with a stuck transfer? Check the troubleshooting pages linked above and keep your TXID handy when contacting support.