Pul o'tkazmasi uchun to'lovlarni taqqoslash
Yo'lakingiz uchun USDT TRC-20 an'anaviy xizmatlar bilan taqqoslang.
| Usul | To'lov | Siz olasiz | Tezlik |
|---|
BOG'LIQ QO'LLANMALAR
2 DOLLARDAN KICHIK NARXGA YUBORISH
100 dollar yoki 10 000 dollar jo'natishingizdan qat'i nazar, to'lov bir xil. Load Energy , USDT jo'nating.
What "fee" actually means in cross-border money
Send $500 from London to Manila with Western Union, the receipt says $4.99 fee. That's not the real number. The real number is sender fee plus exchange-rate spread plus the cash-out cost on the other side. The receiver gets $487 worth of pesos. The "fee" was actually $13, but split across three lines that never appear together.
This calculator does the side-by-side honestly: total cost from when you send to when the recipient holds usable money in their hand. Bank wire, Western Union, Wise, and USDT TRC-20 each get the same treatment.
Why USDT TRC-20 became the rails
For corridors banks treat as exotic — Nigeria, Venezuela, Argentina, Ethiopia — bank wires can cost 7-12% and take days. Western Union charges 5-8% with a worse rate. USDT on Tron settles in seconds for under $2 at delegation rates, and the recipient holds dollars (or pesos, or whatever, after a P2P off-ramp).
The catch is the off-ramp. Sending USDT is cheap. Converting USDT to local cash via P2P, agents, or local exchanges adds a 0.5-3% spread depending on country. We include that in the comparison so the math is honest.
Where USDT still loses
For high-volume corridors with strong Wise rates — UK to Philippines, US to India, EU to Latin America — Wise often beats USDT for amounts under $500. Their FX spread is razor-thin and they handle compliance for the recipient. USDT wins decisively when (a) Wise doesn't serve the corridor, (b) the recipient prefers dollar-denominated savings, or (c) traditional banks are unreliable for the recipient.
The general rule from our data: under $500, single transfer, mainstream corridor → Wise. Over $500, or any corridor where banks are slow or hostile → USDT.
The break-even calculation
For repeating senders (monthly remittance home, freelancer payouts, business contractor payments), the calculator shows annual savings. A US-based freelancer paying a Filipino contractor $2,000/month saves roughly $600-$900 per year on USDT vs Wise once you factor delegation costs. The savings compound; the workflow doesn't change.
If you're sending one-off, just use whatever's easiest. If you're sending monthly, the math is on this page.