Why Bitcoin Has So Many Trading Pairs: BTC/USD vs BTC/USDT vs BTC/USDC

Why the same Bitcoin price appears under different dollar pairs - and what each one means for deposits, withdrawals, settlement, and risk

Why Bitcoin Has So Many Trading Pairs: BTC/USD vs BTC/USDT vs BTC/USDC

Quick Answer

BTC/USD, BTC/USDT, and BTC/USDC all price Bitcoin in dollar terms, but they are not the same market. BTC/USD settles in U.S. dollars. BTC/USDT settles in Tether. BTC/USDC settles in USD Coin. The Bitcoin being traded is the same; the difference is the quote currency on the other side of the trade. 

Key Takeaways

  • BTC/USD: Bitcoin quoted and settled in U.S. dollars. When you sell BTC, you receive USD.
  • BTC/USDT: Bitcoin quoted and settled in Tether. When you sell BTC, you receive USDT.
  • BTC/USDC: Bitcoin quoted and settled in USD Coin. When you sell BTC, you receive USDC.
  • Bitcoin is the same in all three pairs. What changes is the asset used to pay for it or received when you sell it.

What is BTC/USD?

BTC/USD is a Bitcoin trading pair quoted in U.S. dollars. If you buy BTC/USD, you use USD to buy Bitcoin. If you sell BTC/USD, your trades settle in USD.

This pair is common on exchanges that support fiat deposits and withdrawals. It is useful for users who want to move between Bitcoin and a bank-linked dollar balance without first converting into a stablecoin.

What is BTC/USDT?

BTC/USDT is a Bitcoin trading pair quoted in Tether. If you buy BTC/USDT, you use USDT to buy Bitcoin. If you sell BTC/USDT, your trades settle in USDT.

USDT is a dollar-referenced stablecoin issued by Tether. It is widely used across global crypto markets, which is why BTC/USDT often has deep liquidity and tight spreads on many venues.

What is BTC/USDC?

BTC/USDC is a Bitcoin trading pair quoted in USD Coin. If you buy BTC/USDC, you use USDC to buy Bitcoin. If you sell BTC/USDC, your trades settle in USDC.

USDC is a dollar-referenced stablecoin issued by Circle. It is often used on platforms that prioritize USDC as a settlement or collateral asset, especially in markets where on-chain dollar movement is important.

Why Exchanges Offer Multiple Pairs

Exchanges offer multiple Bitcoin pairs because users arrive with different balances. Some users deposit fiat USD from a bank account. Others already hold USDT or USDC and want to trade without converting back into fiat first.

There is also a liquidity and settlement reason. Stablecoin pairs make it easier to move dollar value across crypto venues quickly, without relying on traditional banking hours or settlement systems. Fiat pairs are more useful for users who want direct bank deposits and withdrawals.

By offering multiple pairs such as BTC/USD, BTC/USDT, and BTC/USDC, exchanges can support different funding methods, liquidity flows, and user preferences more efficiently.

When to Use Each Pair

Use BTC/USD When:

You want to buy or sell Bitcoin directly against fiat USD. You plan to deposit from or withdraw to a bank account. You prefer holding dollars instead of stablecoins when you are not holding BTC.

Use BTC/USDT When:

You already hold USDT. You want access to deep stablecoin liquidity across crypto-native venues. You are comfortable holding Tether between trades and understand the stablecoin issuer and peg risks.

Use BTC/USDC When:

You already hold USDC. You use a platform where USDC is the main settlement, collateral, or funding asset. You want to move dollar value on-chain while avoiding a fiat bank transfer for every trade.

When Prices Diverge

Most of the time, BTC/USD, BTC/USDT, and BTC/USDC trade close together. Arbitrage keeps them aligned: when Bitcoin is cheaper in one pair and more expensive in another, traders can buy the cheaper market and sell the richer one.

Prices can still diverge when the quote currency comes under pressure. If USDT or USDC trades below $1, the Bitcoin pair quoted in that stablecoin may show a higher number because it takes more tokens to buy the same Bitcoin. Spreads can also appear when an exchange has fiat deposit or withdrawal issues, or when regional demand for stablecoins is unusually high.

These differences are usually temporary, but they matter. A spread between BTC/USD, BTC/USDT, and BTC/USDC can signal market stress, redemption concerns, exchange-specific pressure, or a shortage of accessible dollar liquidity.

How Backpack Simplifies It

On many exchanges, the pair you choose depends on the currency you already hold. That can fragment liquidity across BTC/USD, BTC/USDT, and BTC/USDC markets, forcing users to think about which pair offers the best liquidity, pricing, or settlement path.

Backpack removes this fragmentation by quoting Bitcoin as BTC/USD while treating fiat USD and USDC as equivalent at 1:1 parity within the platform. Whether a user deposits fiat USD or USDC, they access the same unified Bitcoin market with a single price and trading experience.

The platform also uses a single cross-margined account architecture across spot trading, perpetual futures, and borrow/lending. USD, USDT, and supported crypto assets can sit within one shared collateral pool. Users who prefer to hold USDT as their primary collateral can still access unified liquidity and capital efficiency across the platform.

With Auto Lend enabled, eligible balances can earn lending interest while remaining fully usable as trading collateral. Even unrealized profits can contribute toward yield generation.

The result is a simpler trading experience with fewer pair decisions, less balance fragmentation, and more efficient movement between holding dollars, stablecoin value, and trading Bitcoin.

Trade Bitcoin on Backpack: BTC/USD Spot | BTC/USD Perp | All Markets

The Bottom Line

BTC/USD, BTC/USDT, and BTC/USDC all price Bitcoin in dollar terms, but they settle in different currencies. BTC/USD settles in fiat dollars, BTC/USDT in Tether, and BTC/USDC in USD Coin.

The right pair depends on what you hold, how you want to withdraw, and whether you prefer fiat or stablecoin settlement. Backpack simplifies this by offering a unified BTC/USD experience where USD and USDC are treated as equivalent at 1:1 parity within the platform.

Related reading: what is a spot market, what is a stock market, and what are RWAs.

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Disclaimer: This content is presented to you on an “as is” basis for general information and educational purposes only, without representation or warranty of any kind. It should not be construed as financial, legal or other professional advice, nor is it intended to recommend the purchase of any specific product or service. You should seek your own advice from appropriate professional advisors. Where the article is contributed by a third party contributor, please note that those views expressed belong to the third party contributor, and do not necessarily reflect those of Backpack. Please read our full disclaimer for further details. Digital asset prices can be volatile. The value of your investment may go down or up and you may not get back the amount invested. You are solely responsible for your investment decisions and Backpack is not liable for any losses you may incur. This material should not be construed as financial, legal or other professional advice.

Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice.

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