Crypto converter
Convert an amount of BTC, ETH, BNB, SOL or USDT into USD, EUR or GBP using a live price pulled from Binance public market data. The exact rate used is shown so you can see where the number came from.
Live from Binance public data.
Open an account with code BNB968 →The crypto price is live from Binance public market data. EUR and GBP use the indicative rate you set above — exchanges and banks apply their own. This is a reference figure, not a quote.
What a crypto converter tells you — and what it doesn't
A converter answers a simple question: at the current market price, what is this much crypto worth in money I understand? You enter an amount of BTC, ETH, BNB, SOL or USDT, pick a currency, and the tool multiplies by the live price. The crypto leg here comes straight from Binance's public market data feed, so the rate moves with the real market rather than a number we hard-coded. The exact price it used is printed in the result, along with the time it was fetched, so nothing is hidden.
One honest detail about the fiat side. Binance prices crypto against USDT, which trades very close to one US dollar, so USD conversions are direct. For EUR and GBP there's a second step — a dollar-to-currency rate — and rather than pretend we have a live FX feed, the tool lets you set that rate yourself with a sensible default. Adjust it to whatever your bank or card actually uses and the figure gets closer to your reality. If you only need a dollar figure, leave the currency on USD and the FX step disappears.
What a converter can't tell you is what you'll actually receive. The market price is a mid-market reference. When you trade, you cross the spread, pay a fee, and on larger orders move the price a little — so the cash that lands is usually a touch less than the headline conversion. Our guide to trading fees explains those costs, and the fee calculator turns them into a number for a specific trade. For a quick price check without converting, the live-price tool shows the same feed.
Prices in crypto move fast — a figure that's right now can be off in a minute. Treat the conversion as a snapshot, hit refresh before you act on it, and remember that the value of what you hold can fall as easily as it rises.
Using the number sensibly
- Refresh right before you make a decision — the rate is only as fresh as the last fetch.
- For EUR or GBP, set the FX rate to match your own bank or card.
- Remember the spread and fee mean you receive slightly less than the mid-market value.
- If a live price won't load, the tool says so rather than showing a stale or made-up number.
If you open an account with a referral code such as BNB968, your trading fees can be lower, so a conversion you act on keeps a little more of its value — a code never makes you pay more. The conversion math here is unaffected; it reflects the live market price only.