WAYBILL NO. DZ-2026 · ON-CHAIN TRANSFER GUIDE
Crypto transfers, tracked like a parcel.
Your TxID is the tracking number. The network is the carrier. Confirmations are the sorting hubs. We strip on-chain transfers down to plain English — so your first transfer actually arrives.
Already have an account? You can also open a Web3 Wallet with BN3233
Before any transfer, run through the Transfer Checklist first.
The network is the carrier — pick the wrong one and the package is gone
SECTION 01 · CARRIERSCheapest · Go-to for USDT
TRC20 (TRON)
The most common network for sending USDT: low fees, arrives in minutes. Addresses start with T. If both sides support it, TRC20 is the default pick for everyday transfers.
Address: starts with TPricier · Widest ecosystem
ERC20 (Ethereum)
Gas fees fluctuate with network congestion and can get expensive. But most DeFi and NFT apps live on Ethereum, so if you're heading into the ecosystem, you'll need this one.
Address: starts with 0xBinance ecosystem · Low fees
BEP20 (BNB Chain)
Binance's home network — cheap and fast. Watch out: BEP20 addresses also start with 0x, same format as ERC20, but they are completely different chains. Don't mix them up.
Address: starts with 0xWhat actually happens between "Send" and "Arrived"
SECTION 02 · TRACKING- Step 1 · You hit "Withdraw" on BinancePicked up — the exchange receives your withdrawal request and starts its internal review
- Step 2 · Transaction broadcast to the blockchainPackage dispatched — your TxID appears; this is your tracking number from here on
- Step 3 · Block confirmations accumulatingIn transit — each new block confirmation is like passing through another sorting hub
- Step 4 · Required confirmations reachedDelivered — your wallet balance updates; those coins are now truly yours
Stuck somewhere in the middle? Grab your TxID and check a block explorer — same idea as entering a tracking number on a shipping website.
Most "my coins disappeared" panics come down to one thing: not knowing where to look. Every step of an on-chain transfer is recorded publicly — more transparent than any courier. You just need a cheat sheet for reading it.
We've written troubleshooting guides for the most common "not arrived" scenarios: deposit not showing up, withdrawal stuck in review, wrong network, forgotten Memo. Each one tells you exactly what to check first, what to check next, and when it's time to contact support.
Deposit didn't arrive? Check in this orderBoth ends of the waybill, sorted
SECTION 03 · FROM / TONo Binance account yet?
Buying, depositing, withdrawing — it all starts here. Use referral code BN3233 when you sign up and you may get a fee discount on trades (check the registration page for the current rate).
Register on Binance with BN3233First deposit? Read the deposit walkthrough
Want to hold coins in your own wallet?
The Binance Web3 Wallet built into the app doesn't require you to write down a seed phrase — a lower-stakes first step toward self-custody. Use the same code BN3233 to activate it.
Open a Web3 Wallet with BN3233What is it, and how is it different from your exchange account? This guide explains
Transfer Guides
SECTION 04 · MANIFESTTRC20 vs ERC20 for USDT transfers — one guide to settle it
Fees, speed, and use cases for the three main networks, plus a decision tree Network2026-05-22 DZ-02First withdrawal from Binance to your own wallet — full walkthrough
From copying the address to seeing the on-chain confirmation: what to click and what to double-check Withdraw2026-05-26 DZ-22What is the Binance Web3 Wallet — and how is it different from your exchange account?
Two very different types of funds live in the app: who controls what, who pays gas — one table clears it up Wallet2026-06-11 DZ-03Deposit didn't arrive? Don't panic — check in this order
Confirmation count, network maintenance, minimum deposit amount — nine out of ten "lost" coins are stuck at one of these three Troubleshoot2026-06-02 DZ-04Sent to the wrong network — can you get it back?
Cases you can fix yourself, cases that need the platform, cases that are gone for good Safety2026-05-29 DZ-05What is a TxID? How to track a transfer like a package
Which block explorer to use and which fields actually matter once you have the hash Basics2026-06-05 DZ-10How much do withdrawal fees differ? A network-by-network comparison
Same 100 USDT, different networks — the wrong choice can cost dozens of times more Save fees2026-06-08 DZ-17What is a gas fee? Why it keeps changing and how to pay less
Who gets the fee, why it spikes, and four things you can actually do to reduce it Save fees2026-06-11 DZ-18What is "tainted USDT"? How to avoid dirty funds before you accept
It's not a different coin — it's a transaction history. Control the source and you're most of the way there Safety2026-06-11 DZ-14Why the first transfer should always be a small test amount
The boring move every experienced user makes — and the cheapest insurance you'll ever buy Safety2026-06-09Why we only write about transfers
SECTION 05 · EDITORSYou can find endless "what is blockchain" explainers out there. The losses that actually hit beginners hard, though, don't come from not understanding whitepapers — they come from sending ERC20 USDT to a BEP20 address, forgetting a Memo, or rushing a large transfer before testing with a small one.
The Yidaozhang editorial team stays locked in on this one stretch of the journey where mistakes cost real money. Every guide goes through a real account walkthrough before it's published. Time-sensitive data gets a verification date. Errors get corrected publicly. Every transfer you make should land.
How we keep the lights on
This site earns a referral fee from Binance through code BN3233 — the same code for both Binance registration and the Binance Web3 Wallet. If you use our code, you may receive a fee discount on trades (check the registration page for current terms); we receive a portion of Binance's fee revenue at no extra cost to you. No paywalls, no ads. And if you'd rather not use any referral code, every guide still works fine.