Convert Bitcoin, Ethereum and other coins to USD (and each other) at live prices.
Uses live crypto prices (needs an internet connection).
How do you convert crypto to USD?
Converted amount = amount × (price of the source coin ÷ price of the target), with each coin priced in US dollars from a live feed. For example, if Bitcoin is 60,000 USD, then 1 BTC = 60,000 USD and 300 USD = 0.005 BTC. Prices are an aggregated reference and exclude exchange and network fees.
Understanding your result
Crypto prices move constantly and differ slightly between exchanges, so this is a reference value, not a tradable quote. Spreads, network fees and exchange fees will change what you actually pay or receive.
Formula and method
Converted amount = amount × (price of source ÷ price of target), where each coin price is quoted in US dollars and refreshed from a live feed.
Assumptions and limitations
Prices are an aggregated market reference updated every couple of minutes, not a real-time order-book quote, and exclude exchange and network fees. The selection of coins is limited to major assets.
Worked example
If Bitcoin is priced at 60,000 US dollars, then 1 BTC converts to 60,000 USD, and 300 USD converts to 0.005 BTC.
How to use this tool
- Enter the amount to convert.
- Choose the coin (or USD) to convert from and to.
- Read the converted amount and the live price.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Treating the reference price as the exact amount an exchange will give you after fees and spread.
About the Crypto Converter
Convert between Bitcoin, Ethereum and other major coins — or to and from US dollars — using live market prices. Enter an amount, pick the coins, and see the converted value plus the current price.
Who should use this tool
Crypto holders, traders and shoppers who want a quick, private price conversion without signing in to an exchange.
Frequently asked questions
Are the prices live?
Yes — prices come from a live market feed, cached for a short time on our server and labelled with the last update time.
Why is the price slightly different from my exchange?
Exchanges differ on spread, liquidity and fees, so a small gap from this aggregated reference price is normal.