Large ENS transfers
High-value Ethereum Name Service movements ranked by size and recent activity.
Track large ENS transfers with amount, USD value, sender, receiver, exchange direction, and transaction links. Whale Alerts helps you see where ENS moved and whether it looks like an exchange deposit, exchange withdrawal, or large wallet transfer.
A ENS-only preview from the public whale feed. Open a transaction to check the amount, sender, receiver, flow type, and transaction link.
Use the dashboard for full filtering, longer history, and known wallet labels.
High-value Ethereum Name Service movements ranked by size and recent activity.
ENS moving into or out of known exchange wallets.
Unknown and known wallet routes that need a closer look.
ENS amounts shown with USD-equivalent value where pricing data is available.
This Ethereum Name Service whale tracker focuses on large ENS transfers on Ethereum. The live table is filtered for ENS, so it does not mix Ethereum Name Service with BTC, ETH, stablecoins, or other assets. Each row helps answer a few practical questions: how much ENS moved, where did it come from, where did it go, and did it move into or out of an exchange?
ENS can move between two wallets, but it can also move into a smart contract, exchange deposit address, or service wallet. A large transfer to a contract is not the same as a direct wallet payment. The label and destination matter as much as the amount.
Use these ENS alerts as transaction evidence, not market advice. A transfer into an exchange may be worth watching, but it does not prove the owner sold. A transfer away from an exchange may point to self-custody or another wallet, but it does not prove accumulation by itself.
A useful ENS whale feed separates important moves from ordinary large-transfer noise. These are the patterns this page is built to show.
Large ENS deposits into known exchange wallets. These rows are worth watching, but they do not prove the owner sold.
ENS leaving exchanges for wallets, self-custody, or other known routes. Direction is useful, but it does not prove intent by itself.
Repeated large ENS movements that may show a wallet building up, reducing size, or moving funds in stages.
Large transfers that gather or reorganize ENS across wallets. Open the transaction before drawing a conclusion.
Large ENS transfers where one or both sides are not labeled yet. Useful to monitor, but weak as standalone conclusions.
Check amount and USD value.
Read sender and receiver labels before the signal label.
Separate exchange movement from unknown wallet movement.
Open the transaction page when the route needs review.
Start with direction. ENS moving from an unknown wallet to a labeled exchange has a different meaning from ENS leaving an exchange for a wallet or service address. The first route may show ENS arriving at an exchange. The second may show ENS leaving an exchange. Neither route is a full market conclusion by itself, but both are useful observations when you are tracking Ethereum Name Service.
Then check whether the wallets are known. A labeled exchange, fund, or service wallet makes the transfer easier to read. Unknown-to-unknown ENS movement is weaker unless the amount is unusually large, the address has history, or later transfers touch a known service. Repeated movement matters more than one headline number.
Finally, keep the conclusion narrow. This page does not tell you to buy or sell Ethereum Name Service, or treat a whale transfer as a price forecast. It gives you the transaction hash, ENS amount, USD value, wallet labels, flow type, and links into the wider dashboard.
Whale Alerts monitors large transfers across every coin below. Open a tracker for the live feed, or start from the full whale transactions index.
Short answers about ENS whale transactions, exchange flows, known labels, and alerts.
A Ethereum Name Service whale tracker monitors large ENS transactions and shows the amount, USD value, sender, receiver, known labels, flow type, and transaction link. Whale Alerts uses this for tracking transfers, not price prediction.
No. A large ENS transfer only shows movement. Exchange direction, wallet labels, transfer history, and follow-up transactions all matter.
An exchange inflow means ENS moved toward a known exchange wallet. An exchange outflow means ENS moved away from an exchange. Neither proves buying or selling by itself.
Unknown wallet transfers can reveal large value movement before the wallets are labeled. They are most useful when the amount is large, the behavior repeats, or later transactions connect the wallet to a known exchange or service.
Yes. Whale Alerts publishes notable whale movements through Telegram alerts. The dashboard provides deeper filtering and history when you need to review ENS transfers beyond the public preview.