How to cash out crypto to your bank account
Turn crypto into spendable money. Compare every payout method by fee and speed, pick yours below, and follow the exact steps — to your bank by SEPA or Faster Payments, to a debit card, or privately to a stablecoin with no ID and no limit.
Quick answer: to cash out crypto, send it through our regulated payout partner and receive your local currency by SEPA, Faster Payments or debit card (Visa Direct) — usually within minutes, same business day at the latest. Small amounts need no ID; US bank/card payouts aren't supported. The cheapest and most private route is to swap to a stablecoin like USDT (from 0.5%, no ID, no limit) and keep the dollar value yourself, off-ramping to a bank whenever you choose.
- Bank or card payout
- SEPA · Faster Payments · Visa Direct
- No-ID at the lowest tier
- Or cash out to a stablecoin
- Non-custodial
Updated June 2026
Pick how you want the money. Straight to your bank, to a debit card, or as a stablecoin you hold yourself. The finder below shows the fee and the wait for each method, plus the exact steps — so you keep more and wait less.
How to cash out cryptocurrency
There are two honest ways to cash out crypto. The first is a fiat payout: a regulated partner converts your coin and sends your local currency to a bank account (SEPA in Europe, Faster Payments in the UK) or a debit card (Visa Direct) — usually within minutes, same business day at the latest. Small amounts need no ID; larger payouts need one-time verification, and US bank/card payouts aren’t supported. The second is the stablecoin route: swap your crypto to USDT or USDC from 0.5% in about five minutes, with no account, no ID and no limit, anywhere in the world — then hold the steady dollar value or off-ramp it to a bank whenever you like. For most people the bank transfer is best when you specifically need money in an account; the stablecoin route is the cheapest, fastest and most private option overall.
Wherever you are, there’s a payout that fits. Cash out to a euro bank by SEPA or SEPA Instant across the SEPA area — Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and the rest of the EU/EEA plus Switzerland — or to a UK bank by Faster Payments. Prefer plastic? Push the cash to a debit card by Visa Direct. And anywhere in the world — from Brazil and Mexico to India, Australia, Canada, South Africa and the United States — you can cash out privately to a stablecoin (USDT or USDC) with no ID and no limit, then off-ramp to your local bank whenever you choose.
Have this ready before you start
- For a bank payout: your IBAN (EUR) or sort code + account number (UK), and the name on the account — which should be your own.
- For a card payout: your debit card number (debit only — no credit or prepaid cards).
- For the stablecoin route: your own USDT/USDC wallet address, on a network you can receive (TRC20 is cheapest).
- Either way: an email, so you get the confirmation and can track the payout.
Find your cash-out method
Search or filter by your country, by buy vs cash-out, or by what matters to you — lowest fee, fastest, or no ID — then open any method to see exactly what it costs, how long it takes, and the steps.
Find your payment method. Search or filter — by buy vs cash-out, your country, cheapest, fastest or no-ID — then open any method for its exact fee, speed, currencies and step-by-step. What usually decides it is fees and speed, so we’ve flagged the winners. Best for: Getting crypto in your wallet right now, anywhere, with one tap. 3D Secure protected. Alternative: Use a bank transfer (SEPA / local rail) for a much lower fee. Best for: One-tap checkout on Apple devices. Note: Apple Pay needs a quick ID step (Level 2). Alternative: Google Pay (Android) or a plain card; bank transfer for lower fees. Best for: One-tap checkout on Android/Chrome. No ID at the small-amount tier. Alternative: Apple Pay (iPhone) or a plain card; bank transfer for lower fees. Best for: The cheapest way to buy or cash out in euros. No ID at the small-amount tier. Alternative: A card if you need it instantly; PIX/UPI/local rail outside Europe. Best for: UK bank accounts — low fee, money in minutes, no ID at the small-amount tier. Alternative: A card for instant buys; SEPA if you hold a euro account. Best for: Brazil — instant, low-cost bank payment. Alternative: A card if you prefer; verification shown at checkout. Best for: India — instant Unified Payments Interface transfer. Alternative: A card if you prefer; verification shown at checkout. Best for: US buyers wanting a cheap direct bank transfer and happy to wait a day or two. Alternative: A US wire for large amounts (faster), or a card for instant. Best for: Large US purchases where a wire is the natural choice. Alternative: ACH for smaller amounts; a card for instant. Best for: The Netherlands — the familiar Dutch bank checkout. Alternative: Standard SEPA elsewhere in Europe; a card for instant. Best for: Australia — instant AUD bank payment. Alternative: POLi (AU/NZ) or a card for instant. Best for: Australia & New Zealand bank payments. Alternative: PayID/OSKO in Australia; a card for instant. Best for: Canada — the familiar Interac e-Transfer. Alternative: A card for instant. Best for: Colombia — the local PSE bank network. Alternative: A card for instant. Best for: Mexico — fast SPEI interbank transfer. Alternative: A card for instant. Best for: South Africa — instant EFT bank payment. Alternative: A card for instant. Best for: Maximum privacy, no limits, and anyone whose bank rail isn’t supported — including US users. Alternative: A bank/card payout if you specifically need fiat in an account. Best for: Euro bank accounts cashing out — lowest bank fee, money in minutes. No ID at Level 1 ($150/tx · $3,000/yr). Alternative: Stablecoin for no limit / full privacy; card payout if you have no bank. Best for: UK bank accounts cashing out — pounds in minutes. No ID at Level 1 ($150/tx · $3,000/yr). Alternative: Stablecoin for no limit / full privacy; card payout if you have no bank. Best for: No bank account — push the cash straight to a debit card. Debit cards only (no credit/prepaid). Alternative: A bank transfer is cheaper; stablecoin is cheapest + no limit. No method matches that — try a different filter or country. * “No ID” means no document at the lowest tier, within small-amount limits (buy: $500/tx · $10,000/yr on bank/debit, less on global cards/Google Pay; sell: $150/tx · $3,000/yr) — the stablecoin route has no ID and no limit at all. Order size is $5 minimum and $75,000 maximum per transaction. Country bank rails may ask for verification, shown at checkout. Exact fees and the amount you’ll get are always shown before you confirm. Card payments aren’t available in New York or Hawaii, and bank/card cash-out excludes US payouts (US users cash out via the stablecoin route). Source: AceChange buy & sell coverage. Honest answer: those aren’t part of the regulated on/off-ramp, so we don’t offer Western Union, PayPal, Cash pickup / in-person cash, Wise / Revolut direct payout as direct methods. The workaround covers everyone: cash out to a stablecoin (no ID, no limit, cheapest), then move those dollars however you like.Visa & Mastercard (debit / credit card)
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Apple Pay
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Google Pay
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SEPA bank transfer (EUR)
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Faster Payments (GBP, UK)
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PIX (Brazil)
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UPI (India)
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ACH (United States)
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Wire transfer (United States)
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iDEAL (Netherlands)
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PayID · OSKO (Australia)
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POLi (Australia & New Zealand)
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Interac e-Transfer (Canada)
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PSE (Colombia)
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SPEI (Mexico)
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Instant EFT (South Africa)
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Cash out to a stablecoin (USDT / USDC)
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Cash out by SEPA / SEPA Instant (EUR)
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Cash out by Faster Payments (GBP, UK)
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Cash out to a debit card (Visa Direct)
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Western Union, PayPal or cash?
Two ways to cash out — and which to pick
However you do it, cashing out comes down to one of two choices: money in your bank, or a stablecoin you control.
- Crypto → your bank or card (fiat). A regulated partner pays out your local currency. Best when you specifically need money in a bank account. Small amounts cash out with no ID; larger payouts are verified; US payouts aren’t supported.
- Crypto → stablecoin (fully private). Swap to USDT or USDC with no account and no KYC and hold dollar value yourself. Cheapest (from 0.5%), no limit, works worldwide — then off-ramp whenever you like. For the most private exit of all, see how to cash out Monero anonymously.
For the broader picture across every coin, see our complete guide to selling crypto and the buy & sell crypto page.
How to withdraw crypto to your bank account
To withdraw crypto straight to a bank account, choose the SEPA payout (euros) or Faster Payments (UK pounds) in the finder, enter your IBAN or UK account details, and send your crypto — the local currency lands in your account, usually within minutes of the coin confirming. Small amounts need no ID. US bank payouts aren’t supported, so US users withdraw via the stablecoin route instead.
Saving money: where the fee actually goes
Two costs apply to any cash-out: the payout fee (the rail) and the network fee (moving the coin on-chain). To keep more: prefer a bank transfer over a card (cards cost several times more), send stablecoins on a cheap network like TRC20, and remember the stablecoin route is the lowest-fee option overall at 0.5%. Worked example: cashing out ~$1,000 by SEPA at ~1.5% all-in leaves about $985 in your bank; the same $1,000 to USDT at 0.5% leaves about $995 you control. One honest caveat: the stablecoin route is cheapest because it doesn’t actually convert to cash — you hold a dollar-pegged coin you still have to off-ramp if you want money in a bank. The exact figure is always shown before you confirm. Not sure if you’re up or down? Check our crypto profit calculator first.
What’s the cheapest way to cash out crypto?
The cheapest way to cash out crypto is the stablecoin route at 0.5%, since it skips the fiat payout rail entirely. If you specifically need money in a bank, a SEPA or Faster Payments transfer at about 0.99% is the cheapest fiat option — always pick a bank transfer over a card, which costs several times more.
What’s the fastest way to cash out crypto?
The fastest fiat payouts are a debit card (Visa Direct, near-instant) and SEPA Instant or Faster Payments, all of which arrive in minutes once your coin confirms on-chain. The single fastest option overall is the stablecoin swap — about five minutes, any time of day, anywhere, with no bank cut-off times or weekends to wait through.
How long does each rail take?
- Stablecoin (USDT/USDC) — about 5 minutes, any time, worldwide.
- SEPA Instant (EUR) — minutes to a euro bank account.
- Faster Payments (GBP) — minutes to a UK bank account.
- Debit card (Visa Direct) — near-instant push to your card.
- SEPA standard (EUR) — up to one business day (use only if your bank can’t do Instant).
All bank/card payouts settle once your crypto confirms on-chain, and the partner shows the exact rate and fee before you confirm.
What can go wrong — and how to avoid it
- Wrong network. Sending USDT on ERC-20 to a TRC-20 address (or vice-versa) usually means the funds are gone for good. Pick the network that matches the address you’re paying out to — the widget shows it before you confirm.
- Verify the address. Check the deposit address before you send, and for a large amount do a small test send first. Never reuse an address pasted from your transaction history (address-poisoning scam). On-chain transfers can’t be reversed.
- Mismatched bank name. For a SEPA or Faster Payments payout the receiving account should be in your own name — a mismatch can delay or bounce it.
- Choosing a card to save time. Card payout is the most expensive rail. If you don’t specifically need the money on a card, a bank transfer keeps more of it.
- A “delayed” payout that asks for a release fee. A real payout settles after on-chain confirmations and never asks you to pay an extra fee to “unlock” it. Anyone demanding one is a scam.
Who this page is for — and who it isn’t
- Good fit: you hold crypto in your own wallet and want either local-currency cash in a European or UK bank, or a private, no-ID way to lock in dollar value without a custodial account.
- Also fine: you’re cashing out a modest amount and would rather not upload an ID — the lowest tier covers you up to the limits below, and the stablecoin route has no limit at all.
- Not the right tool: you’re in the United States (fiat payouts aren’t supported there — use the stablecoin route), or you want a bank-like institution to hold and insure your funds. AceChange is non-custodial: you always control the keys, and we never hold your money.
What if I don’t have a bank account?
You have two options that don’t need one. A debit-card payout (Visa Direct) pushes the cash straight to any debit card you hold. Or skip fiat entirely and cash out to a stablecoin: it lands in your own wallet, holds a steady dollar value, and you decide later where it goes. The stablecoin route needs no bank, no card and no ID.
Will my bank flag the payment?
Sometimes. Some banks query or briefly hold an incoming transfer they can see is crypto-related — especially the first time, or for larger amounts. It’s a routine check, not a problem with the payout; if it happens, your bank usually just asks where the money came from, and answering honestly (a crypto sale) clears it. If you’d rather avoid the question altogether, the stablecoin route never touches your bank.
Can I cash out crypto to PayPal, Western Union or cash?
Not directly — PayPal, Western Union and in-person cash aren’t part of the regulated payout rails, so we won’t pretend to offer them. The workaround covers everyone: cash out to a USDT or USDC stablecoin (no ID, no limit, lowest fee), then move those dollars onward to whatever account or service you use.
Can I cash out crypto without ID?
Yes — within limits. At the lowest tier (Level 1) you can cash out to a bank, or to a debit card via Visa Direct (debit cards only), with no ID document — just basic details — up to the per-transaction and yearly limits below. Larger amounts need a one-time Level 2 verification. For a fully no-KYC, unlimited cash-out, the stablecoin route asks only for your wallet addresses — and is also the cheapest.
No-KYC cash-out limits & verification levels
The bank/card route runs through a regulated payout partner with three tiers. Most people cashing out modest amounts never need more than Level 1 (no ID). The stablecoin route has no account and no limits.
| Payout method | Per transaction | Daily | Monthly | Yearly |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SEPA / SEPA Instant (EUR) | $150 | $600 | $1,500 | $3,000 |
| Faster Payments — UK (GBP) | $150 | $600 | $1,500 | $3,000 |
| Card withdrawal (Visa Direct, debit only) | No ID at Level 1 — exact limit shown before you confirm | |||
| Stablecoin (USDT / USDC) | No account, no KYC, no upper limit | |||
The three levels at a glance
| Feature | Level 1 (Lite) | Level 2 (Standard) | Level 3 (Enhanced) |
|---|---|---|---|
| ID document required | ✗ No | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Selfie / face scan | ✗ No | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Source of funds | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✓ Yes |
| Onboarding time | ~30 seconds | ~10 minutes | ~24 hours |
| Bank & debit-card payout, no ID | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Per transaction (bank) | $150 | $25,000 | $75,000 |
| Yearly (bank) | $3,000 | $250,000 | $750,000 |
| Stablecoin (no KYC) | ✓ No limit | ✓ No limit | ✓ No limit |
Level 1 limits are informative and may vary slightly by region — the exact limit always appears before you confirm. Level 2 (Standard) adds a government ID, a proof of address and a quick liveness check (about 10 minutes, once) and unlocks higher limits. Level 3 (Enhanced) adds source-of-funds documents for high-volume payouts. The no-KYC stablecoin route is unaffected. Card payments aren’t available in New York or Hawaii.
Do I pay tax when I cash out crypto?
In many countries, cashing out crypto to fiat counts as a taxable disposal — and in some places swapping one coin for another (including to a stablecoin) can be too. Reporting is your responsibility, and rules vary widely by jurisdiction. Keep a simple record of each cash-out: the date, the amount, the rate, and the on-chain transaction ID. This is general information, not tax advice — check your local rules or a qualified professional.
Is it safe to cash out this way?
Two things keep it straightforward. First, AceChange is non-custodial: we never hold your coins or your cash. Crypto goes from your wallet, fiat is paid out by the licensed partner directly to your bank or card, and there’s no account holding your money in between for anyone to freeze. Second, the fiat payout runs through a regulated payment partner — which is also why larger or card payouts ask for one-time verification. When privacy is the priority, the stablecoin route only ever touches your own wallet addresses. To stay fully private, read our private crypto transactions guide before the fiat step.
Cash out a specific coin
The method finder above works for every coin, but a few have a quirk worth knowing before you send:
- Cash out Bitcoin (BTC). Your payout settles once the deposit confirms on-chain — Bitcoin confirmations usually take 10–30 minutes, so it’s typically same-day, not instant. Cash out Bitcoin →
- Cash out Ethereum (ETH). Sending ETH costs gas ($5–40 on a busy day), separate from the payout fee — send when the network is quiet to keep more. Cash out Ethereum →
- Cash out USDT / stablecoins. Already worth about a dollar, so there’s no price risk while you wait — off-ramp to your bank, or hold it. Sending on TRC20 keeps the fee tiny.
- Any of 70+ coins. Every coin follows the same two routes. Open the full sell crypto hub →
How to sell crypto in 3 steps
You can sell crypto in three steps — to cash or to a stablecoin:
- Choose your payout — Pick crypto and how much to sell, then choose cash (bank or card via the regulated partner) or a private stablecoin swap.
- Send your crypto — Send crypto from your own wallet to the one-time address shown — double-check the network, transfers are irreversible.
- Get paid — Cash lands in your bank or on your card (usually same day); a stablecoin swap arrives in your wallet in minutes.
Sell crypto — frequently asked questions
Short, direct answers to the most common questions about selling crypto.
How do I sell crypto for cash?
Choose crypto and the amount, send it from your wallet to our regulated payout partner, and the money is paid to your bank account (SEPA / Faster Payments) or debit card (Visa Direct), usually the same day once the coin confirms.
Can I sell crypto without ID or KYC?
Small cash-out orders can be completed at the lowest verification tier without an ID document; larger payouts need standard verification because the regulated partner is the licensed entity for fiat. For a fully no-KYC route, swap crypto to a stablecoin (USDT/USDC) instead and keep the value in your own wallet.
How can I cash out crypto privately, with no KYC?
Swap crypto to a stablecoin like USDT or USDC right here — a wallet-to-wallet crypto swap with no account and no ID. You hold the stablecoin yourself and can spend, hold or off-ramp it later, wherever suits you.
How long does selling crypto take, and what does it cost?
Bank and card payouts are typically same-day once your coin confirms on-chain. The regulated partner sets the fiat payout rate and fee, shown before you confirm; a stablecoin swap instead carries the service fee from 0.5% already built into the rate.
What is the cheapest and fastest way to cash out?
The cheapest and fastest option overall is to cash out to a stablecoin like USDT — from 0.5%, no ID, no limit, and it settles in about five minutes worldwide. For money straight into a bank, choose a transfer over a card (cards cost several times more) and use SEPA Instant or Faster Payments for arrival in minutes.
Can I cash out crypto to PayPal or Western Union?
Not directly — PayPal and Western Union are not part of the regulated payout rails. Payouts go to a bank account (SEPA / Faster Payments) or a debit card (Visa Direct), which is faster and cheaper. The most flexible route is to cash out to a stablecoin you control, then move it to whichever service you prefer.
Is selling crypto a taxable event?
In many countries selling crypto for fiat is a taxable disposal, and reporting is your responsibility. Keep the transaction ID, amount and rate for your records. Rules differ by jurisdiction — this is general information, not tax advice; check your local rules or a qualified professional.