What Are Trading Pairs in Crypto?
von LCX Team ·
In cryptocurrency markets, a trading pair is a combination of two assets that can be exchanged directly for one another on an exchange. The pair defines the two sides of a transaction: the asset being bought and the asset being used to buy it.
The Structure of a Trading Pair
A trading pair is written as two ticker symbols separated by a slash or hyphen. For example, BTC/USDT means Bitcoin is being traded against Tether. The first asset listed is called the base currency, and the second is the quote currency.
- Base currency — the asset being bought or sold (e.g., BTC in BTC/USDT)
- Quote currency — the asset used to measure the price and settle the trade (e.g., USDT in BTC/USDT)
The price of a trading pair always expresses how much of the quote currency is needed to purchase one unit of the base currency. If BTC/USDT is priced at 67,000, it means one Bitcoin costs 67,000 Tether.
Types of Trading Pairs
1. Crypto-to-Fiat Pairs
These pairs combine a cryptocurrency with a fiat currency such as the US Dollar (USD), Euro (EUR), or British Pound (GBP). Examples include BTC/USD and ETH/EUR. These pairs serve as the primary entry and exit points between traditional finance and crypto markets.
2. Crypto-to-Crypto Pairs
These pairs consist of two cryptocurrencies, with no fiat currency involved. Examples include ETH/BTC and SOL/ETH. A trader holding Ethereum who wants to acquire Solana can use a SOL/ETH pair without converting to fiat first.
3. Stablecoin Pairs
Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies pegged to the value of a fiat currency, most commonly the US Dollar. Common stablecoins used in pairs include USDT (Tether), USDC (USD Coin), and BUSD (Binance USD). Examples: BTC/USDT, ETH/USDC. Stablecoin pairs allow traders to hold a stable-value asset within the crypto ecosystem without exiting to a bank account.
4. Altcoin Pairs
Many smaller or newer cryptocurrencies are only available as pairs against major coins like Bitcoin or Ethereum, rather than directly against fiat. For instance, a lesser-known token might only be listed as TOKEN/BTC or TOKEN/ETH.
How Trading Pairs Work in Practice
When a trader places a buy order on a pair like ETH/BTC, they are offering BTC in exchange for ETH. The exchange’s order book matches this with a seller who wants to give up ETH and receive BTC. The transaction executes when a buyer’s bid price meets a seller’s ask price.
Each pair has its own order book, price chart, and liquidity depth. Liquidity refers to how easily and quickly a pair can be traded without significantly affecting its price.
Cross Rates and Implied Prices
When a direct trading pair does not exist between two assets, exchanges derive a price through a cross rate — using a common intermediate asset. For example, to determine the price of Asset A in terms of Asset C, the exchange uses:
A/B × B/C = A/C
This calculation allows indirect trading between assets that share a common quote currency.
Why Trading Pairs Matter
The selection of available trading pairs on an exchange determines which assets can be traded directly against each other. Assets with more pairs listed against them have higher interconnectivity within the market. Bitcoin and Ethereum serve as primary quote currencies on most exchanges, meaning a wide variety of altcoins are denominated in BTC or ETH.
Understanding trading pairs is fundamental to navigating any cryptocurrency exchange, reading price charts accurately, executing trades, and calculating portfolio values across different asset denominations.
