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Bitcoin.com Wallet Integrates FixedFloat for Non-Custodial Crypto Swaps

Bitcoin.com Wallet Integrates FixedFloat for Non-Custodial Crypto Swaps

Bitcoin.com Wallet has added FixedFloat as a swap provider, giving users another option to exchange cryptocurrencies without leaving their self-custody wallet. The integration went live on June 8, the company said, and is now available for anyone using the app.

FixedFloat is a non-custodial swap service that draws liquidity from multiple venues, meaning trades aren't dependent on a single exchange or pool. For users, that's a direct route from one asset to another — no deposits, no order books, no waiting for an intermediary to greenlight the transaction.

How FixedFloat works

Unlike a typical exchange order, FixedFloat pools liquidity from various sources and matches a user's swap request automatically. The wallet sends the destination address and the amount; FixedFloat handles the rest. Because it's non-custodial, the user retains control of their private keys throughout. The service supports a range of tokens and network crossovers, which is increasingly a friction point in self-custody setups.

Self-custody and swaps

Crypto swaps are a core part of the self-custody workflow. Moving between, say, Bitcoin and Ethereum, or from one layer-2 to another, often requires going through an exchange — which defeats the point of holding your own keys. Built-in swap providers like FixedFloat let users stay in their wallet the whole time. Bitcoin.com Wallet already had other swap integrations; adding FixedFloat expands the liquidity pool and gives the user more routes to get a trade done.

Rollout and availability

The feature rolled out a little over a week ago. Users on the latest version of Bitcoin.com Wallet should see FixedFloat as an option when they tap the swap button. No additional setup or KYC is required — the service runs on the wallet's existing address infrastructure. The timing lands at a moment when more people are looking to move assets across chains without trusting a third party with their funds. For now, the integration covers the most common swap pairs, though the provider's full asset list applies.