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How to convert BNB to ETH inside Trust Wallet?

Trust Wallet 是一款由币安收购的去中心化多链钱包,支持超100条公链与10,000+代币,资产完全由用户自管,依赖助记词恢复,不存私钥,安全自主。(155字)

Jun 03, 2026 at 02:40 pm

Accessing the Swap Interface

1. Open the Trust Wallet application on your mobile device and unlock it using your passcode, biometric authentication, or wallet recovery phrase.

2. Navigate to the Assets tab located at the bottom navigation bar to view your current token balances.

3. Locate and tap on the BNB asset tile — this opens the BNB detail screen where core actions are accessible.

4. Tap the Swap button prominently displayed on the asset page; this initiates the decentralized exchange flow powered by integrated liquidity protocols.

5. Confirm that the source chain is set to BNB Smart Chain (BSC) — essential for accurate routing and fee estimation.

Selecting Destination Token and Network

1. In the Swap interface, the “From” field auto-populates with your BNB balance and BSC as the originating network.

2. Tap the “To” field and search for ETH — ensure you select the version compatible with the Ethereum Mainnet, not a wrapped or bridged variant unless explicitly intended.

3. Verify that the destination network switches to Ethereum (ETH) — Trust Wallet will display an alert if cross-chain conversion requires bridging instead of native swapping.

4. Review the available liquidity sources: Uniswap V2/V3, PancakeSwap, and other aggregated DEXs — Trust Wallet dynamically selects optimal routes based on slippage tolerance and gas efficiency.

5. Adjust the slippage tolerance manually if needed — default is 0.5%, but volatile markets may require up to 2% to prevent transaction failure.

Reviewing Transaction Parameters

1. Enter the amount of BNB you wish to convert — the interface instantly calculates the estimated ETH output, including all fees and price impact.

2. Check the Estimated Output, Price Impact, and Network Fee breakdown — these values appear in real time and update as you modify the input amount.

3. Tap Advanced to inspect underlying swap path details: intermediate tokens, pool hops, and protocol fees — especially relevant when ETH is not directly paired with BNB on a single chain.

4. Ensure the Gas Limit and Max Priority Fee reflect current Ethereum network conditions — Trust Wallet pulls live data from Etherscan-compatible APIs to suggest competitive values.

5. Confirm that no external bridge prompt appears — if one does, the operation is not a direct swap but a two-step transfer-and-convert process requiring manual confirmation across chains.

Executing the Swap Transaction

1. Tap Swap after verifying all parameters — this triggers a cryptographic signature request using your locally stored private key.

2. Approve the transaction in the pop-up modal — carefully review the total BNB amount, ETH address, and network fee before signing.

3. Wait for the wallet to broadcast the transaction to the BSC mempool — status changes to “Pending” immediately upon submission.

4. Monitor progress via the transaction history section — Trust Wallet displays block confirmations and links to BSCScan for on-chain verification.

5. Once confirmed, the ETH balance does not appear instantly in your wallet — you must manually add the Ethereum Mainnet network and import the ETH token contract address if not already visible.

Troubleshooting Common Swap Failures

1. If the swap fails with “Insufficient Liquidity”, try reducing the swap amount or selecting an alternate route such as BNB → USDT → ETH.

2. A “Transaction Reverted” error often stems from outdated allowance — approve BNB spending again via the “Approve” button before retrying.

3. When ETH does not appear post-swap, verify whether the wallet is connected to the Ethereum network — switching networks is required to view native ETH balances.

4. Slippage-related rejections occur when market movement exceeds the set tolerance — increase slippage or wait for lower volatility windows during off-peak hours.

5. Gas estimation errors may arise if the Ethereum node connection is unstable — toggle between RPC providers in Settings > Wallet > Network Settings to refresh connectivity.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: Does Trust Wallet support direct BNB-to-ETH swaps without bridging?Yes — only when both tokens reside on the same chain and share a direct liquidity pool. On BSC, ETH is typically represented as Binance-Peg ETH; true native ETH requires bridging to Ethereum Mainnet.

Q2: Why does Trust Wallet show ETH as zero after a successful BSC-based swap?Because the swapped token is usually BETH (Binance-Peg ETH) on BSC, not native ETH on Ethereum. You must switch to the Ethereum network and manually add the ETH token to see it.

Q3: Can I swap BNB for ETH using a hardware wallet connected to Trust Wallet?No — Trust Wallet’s Swap function only supports software wallets with embedded private keys. Hardware wallet integration is limited to transaction signing, not automated DEX routing.

Q4: Is the swap rate fixed once I click “Swap”, or does it change before confirmation?The displayed rate is an estimate. Final execution depends on block inclusion timing and pool reserves at the moment of settlement — rates fluctuate until the transaction is mined.

Disclaimer:info@kdj.com

The information provided is not trading advice. kdj.com does not assume any responsibility for any investments made based on the information provided in this article. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and it is highly recommended that you invest with caution after thorough research!

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