The frame · what cashing out actually means
You hold a stablecoin token in a wallet or on an exchange. You want the dollar value to land in a bank account, a debit card or a wire transfer to a counterparty. The steps required depend on three things: the venue where the token currently sits, the bank account where you want the fiat to land, and the legal jurisdiction connecting them. The four off-ramp methods below cover the working combinations in 2026.
Method 01 · Exchange sell-and-withdraw
Exchange sell-and-withdraw
Sell USDT or USDC to fiat (USD, EUR, GBP, AED, INR depending on venue) on the spot pair, then withdraw fiat via bank transfer, SEPA, FPS, IMPS or local equivalent. Coinbase's USDC-USD pair has zero trading fee and zero withdrawal fee for ACH in the US. Kraken's USDC-USD takes about 0.16% maker fee and 0-5 USD for wire. Binance's USDT-EUR via SEPA is roughly 1-2 EUR per withdrawal, with no trading fee on the spot pair if you use the convert tool, or 0.1% if you use the limit order book.
The trap. Bank settlement time. ACH in the US settles next business day; wire is same-day but costs 15-25 USD; SEPA Instant in the EU is minutes but only on supported routes; international wires can take 1-3 business days plus an intermediary bank fee. The crypto withdrawal from your wallet to the exchange is the fastest leg; the fiat withdrawal from the exchange to your bank is usually the slowest.
When to use. Default choice for amounts above a few hundred dollars where you have an existing exchange relationship and a bank account in a supported country. The cleanest tax trail; the exchange reports your transactions in a format most CPAs can process.
When not to use. Your bank does not accept transfers from crypto exchanges (an issue in some jurisdictions and for some traditional banks even where the exchange is licensed). Your jurisdiction has currency-control restrictions that make fiat withdrawal from an offshore exchange slow or risky.
Method 02 · Peer-to-peer (P2P) marketplaces
P2P marketplaces (Binance P2P, OKX P2P, Bybit P2P)
The exchange acts as escrow. You list USDT (or take a buy-side listing) at a price quoted in local currency. A counterparty pays the local currency to your bank account or payment app (Wise, Revolut, Zelle, UPI, PIX, Mobile Money, local-bank transfer) directly. Once you confirm receipt of the payment, the exchange releases the USDT to the counterparty's account.
The trap. Counterparty scams. The two common patterns: (a) the buyer claims to have paid but the payment is not visible on your side — do not release escrow until your bank confirms receipt; (b) the buyer pays from a flagged account, the payment is later reversed, and you have already released the USDT — choose counterparties with high completion rates and verified profiles, and trade above the platform's "verified merchant" tier for larger amounts.
When to use. Cross-border payments where the receiver is in a country with limited exchange off-ramp options (Nigeria, Argentina, Turkey, Vietnam, Philippines). When the cost of bank wire is high relative to trade size. When you need same-hour settlement and your bank is slow.
When not to use. Large amounts (above 10-20 thousand USD) where the time spent verifying each individual counterparty is not worth the price improvement over Method 01. First-time stablecoin users — the operational learning curve is steep enough that mistakes cost more than they save.
Method 03 · DEX-to-card services
DEX-to-card services (MoonPay sell, Banxa, Mercuryo)
Send USDT or USDC from a self-custody wallet to a sell-side service. The service converts the crypto to fiat at a quoted rate and sends the fiat to your linked debit card, bank account or PayPal account. MoonPay's sell, Banxa, Mercuryo and a handful of smaller competitors all offer this. The user experience is similar to selling shares through a retail brokerage — quote, confirm, wait.
The trap. Embedded spread. The "fee" quoted is often the explicit fee; the effective cost includes the spread the service takes on the FX rate. Always check the quoted rate against the spot reference (CoinMarketCap, Coingecko or Tradingview for USDT-EUR or USDC-USD) to know the all-in cost. The all-in number is what matters; the headline fee can be 1.5% with another 1.5% in spread, giving you 3% effective.
When to use. Small amounts where the convenience is worth the spread. First-time off-ramp where the user is not comfortable using an exchange. Jurisdictions where the major exchanges do not offer direct fiat withdrawal but a card-rail service does (Latin America, parts of Asia, Africa).
When not to use. Amounts above a few thousand dollars where the spread becomes meaningful. Frequent transactions — the cumulative spread adds up faster than people expect.
Method 04 · Off-ramp aggregators and licensed money-service businesses
Off-ramp aggregators (Wise crypto support, Revolut crypto, regional MSBs)
Licensed money-service businesses that accept crypto deposits and pay out fiat through their existing banking network. Revolut Crypto allows EU and UK users to convert USDC and USDT to local currency inside the app and spend through the existing Revolut debit card. Wise has limited crypto support (more for receiving USDC against an EUR or GBP account than for converting). Regional MSBs in Hong Kong, Singapore, Dubai and Switzerland offer dedicated stablecoin off-ramp services for amounts up to 100k per transaction with same-day SWIFT settlement.
The trap. KYC tier. Most aggregators have multiple KYC tiers; the higher-amount transactions require additional verification (proof of source of funds, employment verification, source of crypto purchase). First-time users often discover this at the moment they want to withdraw, not at signup. Front-load the KYC before you need to withdraw anything urgent.
When to use. Mid-size amounts (1k to 50k USD) where you have an existing relationship with the aggregator. Cross-border transactions where the aggregator's banking network is faster than the direct exchange route.
When not to use. Very small amounts (the fixed KYC overhead is not worth it). Very large amounts (a regulated exchange's wire route is usually cleaner). Jurisdictions without a licensed MSB option.
Decision tree · which method for which situation
Common mistakes
Sending to the wrong network
The single most common loss. Sending USDT-TRC-20 to a USDT-ERC-20 deposit address loses the funds. Most major exchanges in 2026 automatically detect and recover wrong-chain deposits for the major chains (Ethereum, Tron, BNB Chain, Solana, Polygon), but the recovery process takes days to weeks and may carry a fee. For less common chains (Optimism, Arbitrum, Base for USDT, smaller L2s), recovery is not always possible. Read the chain selector on both the sending and receiving sides.
Sending to a memo-required address without the memo
Some exchanges (Bybit, OKX, Kraken for certain assets) require a memo or destination tag in addition to the address. Sending without the memo or with a wrong memo can lose the funds. The exchange-to-exchange transfer is the common error case; copy the memo with the address every time.
Hitting the bank's anti-fraud system on the fiat side
Banks in some jurisdictions flag incoming transfers from crypto exchanges, particularly for first-time relationships or large amounts. The transfer may be held for verification or rejected entirely. For the first withdrawal to a new bank account, start with a small test amount (a few hundred USD) to establish the relationship; then scale up.
Forgetting that conversion is a taxable event
In most jurisdictions, converting USDT or USDC to fiat is a taxable event because the regulator treats the stablecoin as property. The taxable amount is usually small or zero because stablecoins hold near peg, but the transaction must be reported. Save the exchange's transaction history before you withdraw fiat; some exchanges restrict access to old transaction history after a certain period. This is general information, not tax advice.
What an experienced desk actually does
The desk's pattern, for transparency:
- Working balance off-ramp through the primary exchange (Binance for SEPA / FPS, occasionally Kraken for USD wires). Average all-in cost around 0.2%; settlement same day for SEPA Instant, next day for FPS, two days for international wires.
- P2P only for specific cross-border use cases where the exchange route is not available — receiving payment from a counterparty in a jurisdiction without good banking rails into our home jurisdiction. Manual verification of every counterparty above 1k USD.
- No DEX-to-card services. The convenience is real for first-time users but the spread is unattractive at scale.
- No off-ramp aggregators in the home jurisdiction; occasional use of a HK-licensed MSB for specific transactions where the regulated path matters.
If you want to act on this
For global users whose primary exchange is Binance, the off-ramp through the exchange's SEPA, FPS or supported local channels is usually the lowest-friction route. The referral link opens a Binance registration page pre-filled with the StableDesk referral code BN16188. Registering through that link does not change your fees. Full disclosure on the disclaimer page. For US residents whose primary venue is Coinbase, the USDC-USD off-ramp is structurally cleaner than anything else discussed here.
Further reading on this site
- USDT vs USDC, the 2026 report — for the broader question of which stablecoin to hold before the off-ramp moment.
- How to choose your first stablecoin — the on-ramp companion piece.
- Stablecoin cross-chain tutorial — if your current wallet is on a different chain than your off-ramp venue accepts.
- Glossary — definitions for terms like SEPA Instant, escrow, KYC tier, source-of-funds.