This is a practical, step-by-step walkthrough for people using a mobile software wallet who want to trade native, non-EVM coins (Litecoin, Dogecoin, Cardano, Nano, Algorand, etc.) into EVM tokens such as BNB. If you regularly interact with DeFi, or you want to keep all activity non-custodial, this will help you pick the safest, fastest path.
Who this wallet is best for
Who should look elsewhere
Non-EVM tokens run on different technology stacks. Litecoin and Dogecoin are UTXO chains (like Bitcoin). Cardano uses an extended UTXO model. Nano uses a block-lattice. Algorand uses its own account model. That means there is no single EVM-style smart contract you can call to perform an on-chain swap. So how do you move value across chains? There are three common patterns:
Why does that matter? Because a one-tap in-app swap that works for ERC20 tokens often won't work for native LTC or DOGE unless there's a wrapped version available on an EVM chain.
| Method | How it works | Trust model | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-app swap (wrapped token) | Swap BEP20/ERC20 token inside wallet via DEX aggregator | Non-custodial (smart-contract) | Fast swaps between EVM tokens you already hold |
| WalletConnect / DApp bridge | Connect to a bridge UI and sign multi-step transactions | Non-custodial but complex | Native-to-native swaps (if the bridge supports the asset) |
| Centralized exchange (CEX) | Send native coin to exchange, trade, withdraw target token | Custodial during trade | Simplicity, liquidity, broad token support |
![Swap UI screenshot placeholder]
So, how to swap litecoin to bnb on trust wallet? There are three realistic routes. Pick one based on how much risk and complexity you accept.
(Works only if the LTC in your wallet is a BEP20/ERC20 representation. Check the token details for a contract address.)
Tip: If the LTC is native (no contract address), this path won't work. And double-check the contract address — scammers create fake wrapped tokens.
Related: see swap-in-wallet for a deeper walkthrough of in-app swapping mechanics.
Why this often wins: exchanges handle the cross-chain plumbing for you. But remember: your funds are custodial while on the exchange and you pay withdrawal fees and KYC trade-offs.
See transfer-from-exchange-apps and transfer-from-binance for transfer tips.
Caveats: bridges carry smart contract and economic risk. I recommend testing small amounts first.
swap doge trust wallet flows mirror the LTC guidance. If you hold a BEP20/DOGE representation you can swap inside EVM DEX flows. If you hold native Dogecoin, use a CEX or a bridge that supports native DOGE. One extra tip: DOGE UTXO confirmations are typically fast, but not instantaneous — expect a short wait before the exchange accepts deposits.
how to swap nano on trust wallet? Nano uses a block-lattice architecture and not all mobile software wallets support it. If Nano isn’t listed in your wallet:
swap algorand on trust wallet: Algorand is an account-based chain with its own token standard. If Algorand appears in your assets you can send/receive it natively, but converting to BNB will usually require an exchange or a bridge that supports ALGO.
If you want a focused guide for other token types, check how-to-swap-tokens and cross-chain-bridges.
Security features to use: biometric lock, seed phrase backup, and (for high-value holdings) pairing with a hardware device (see hardware-wallets-ledger).
I ran three small trials to verify the flows. First, I converted a wrapped BEP20 token to BNB inside the wallet and the swap executed within one minute. Then I moved native LTC through an exchange: deposit/confirm/trade/withdraw — end-to-end it took under 20 minutes in low network congestion. Finally, I tested a bridge UI via the DApp browser with a tiny amount; the bridge required multiple confirmations and took a few minutes longer. Your mileage will vary by network congestion and bridge liquidity.
But the takeaway was consistent: start small, confirm networks and contract addresses, and monitor each transaction until fully confirmed.
Q: Is it safe to keep crypto in a hot wallet?
A: Hot (software) wallets are convenient for daily DeFi use, but they carry higher risk than cold storage. I believe small-to-medium balances are fine for active use; for large sums use a hardware wallet (see hardware-wallets-ledger).
Q: How do I revoke token approvals?
A: Use the wallet's token approval / revoke feature or a dedicated revoke tool via the DApp browser. See token-approvals-revoke for step-by-step instructions.
Q: What happens if I lose my phone?
A: If you have a secure seed phrase backup, you can restore your non-custodial wallet on another device. See backup-recovery-seed-phrase. (But never store the phrase in cloud notes.)
Q: Can I swap Nano in the wallet?
A: If Nano doesn’t appear in your asset list it isn’t supported by the app. Use an exchange or a wallet that lists Nano. Always test with a tiny transfer first.
Swapping non-EVM tokens inside a mobile software wallet is doable, but there are trade-offs. For speed and simplicity, a centralized exchange often wins. For full self-custody, bridges and wrapped-token routes let you stay non-custodial — at higher technical and smart-contract risk. In my experience, combining the wallet with careful small tests and regular approval revocations keeps day-to-day DeFi activity practical and safer.
Ready for the next step? If you want an in-depth walkthrough of in-app swaps, see swap-in-wallet. If you plan to use bridge UIs, read the cross-chain primer at cross-chain-bridges and make sure your DApp browser is enabled: enable-dapp-browser-android / enable-dapp-browser-iphone.