Market Cap: $2.1545T -1.91%
Volume(24h): $70.9575B 1.52%
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20 - Extreme Fear

  • Market Cap: $2.1545T -1.91%
  • Volume(24h): $70.9575B 1.52%
  • Fear & Greed Index:
  • Market Cap: $2.1545T -1.91%
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How to Check Wallet Addresses Before Sending Crypto

比特币钱包地址是唯一字母数字字符串(如1LMcKy…、bc1qsr…),以1/3/bc1开头,用于安全收发BTC;务必核对格式与网络,错发不可挽回。(155字)

Jun 24, 2026 at 08:39 pm

Understanding Wallet Address Formats

1. Bitcoin addresses begin with '1', '3', or 'bc1' depending on the script type and encoding standard used.

2. Ethereum and most ERC-20 tokens use addresses starting with '0x', followed by exactly 40 hexadecimal characters.

3. TRON-based USDT addresses start with 'T' and are 34 characters long, while BSC BEP-20 addresses also begin with '0x' but operate on a different chain.

4. Cardano addresses begin with 'addr1' or 'stake1', and Solana addresses consist of 44 base58 characters without fixed prefixes.

5. Each blockchain enforces strict format validation; submitting an invalidly formatted address will result in transaction rejection at the wallet level before broadcast.

Network Compatibility Verification

1. A USDT address valid on TRC-20 is structurally incompatible with ERC-20, even if both appear as alphanumeric strings.

2. Sending USDT via ERC-20 to a TRC-20 address results in permanent loss—no smart contract or node can route cross-chain value without bridging infrastructure.

3. Wallet interfaces often display network labels (e.g., “Ethereum Mainnet”, “BNB Smart Chain”) beside address fields—these must match the sender’s selected withdrawal network.

4. Some wallets auto-detect network from address prefix, but this behavior is not standardized and cannot be relied upon for safety-critical transfers.

5. Exchanges like Binance explicitly require manual network selection before revealing deposit addresses, enforcing user responsibility for alignment.

Address Validation Techniques

1. Manual character count verification helps detect truncated or extended strings—Bitcoin P2PKH addresses are 26–35 characters, Bech32 addresses are 42–62 characters.

2. Paste the address into a blockchain explorer matching the intended network—Etherscan for Ethereum, Tronscan for TRON—to confirm it resolves without error.

3. Use checksum validation where supported: Ethereum addresses include mixed-case checksums that fail validation if mistyped, while Bitcoin Bech32 uses built-in error detection.

4. Scan QR codes directly from the recipient’s wallet interface rather than capturing screenshots—this avoids OCR misreads and clipboard injection risks.

5. Never rely solely on visual similarity—two addresses differing by one character may belong to entirely unrelated entities with zero recovery path.

Security Checks During Transaction Initiation

1. Wallet applications displaying green checkmarks or “verified” badges next to addresses do not indicate ownership confirmation—only syntactic correctness.

2. Reusing addresses increases traceability and reduces privacy; however, reusing a previously validated address does not eliminate the need for format and network checks on each new transfer.

3. Browser extensions that auto-replace clipboard contents with attacker-controlled addresses have compromised thousands of transactions—disable all non-essential extensions during crypto transfers.

4. Hardware wallets enforce address confirmation on-device screens, forcing users to manually verify every character before signing—this remains the strongest consumer-grade safeguard.

5. Never skip the final address review screen—even if the wallet pre-fills the field or auto-selects the network.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I recover funds sent to an incorrect wallet address?Recovery is impossible if the address exists on the target blockchain and the transaction confirms. No central authority controls private keys or transaction reversal.

Q: Why do some wallets show multiple addresses for the same coin?Each address corresponds to a unique key pair. Wallets generate new addresses per transaction to enhance privacy and prevent balance linkage across payments.

Q: Is it safe to share my wallet address publicly?Yes—the address is designed for public distribution. However, exposing it enables others to monitor your balance and transaction history on explorers.

Q: What happens if I send ETH to an ETC address?The transaction succeeds on Ethereum Classic’s chain but holds no value there unless the recipient controls both ETH and ETC private keys—and even then, replay protection may block execution.

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!

If you believe that the content used on this website infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately (info@kdj.com) and we will delete it promptly.

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