Large ETH transfers
High-value native Ethereum movements ranked by size and recent activity.
Track large ETH transfers with amount, sender, receiver, exchange direction, staking or contract labels when available, and transaction links. ETH can move through exchanges, wallets, staking addresses, bridges, and smart contracts, so the destination matters.
An Ethereum-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 native Ethereum movements ranked by size and recent activity.
ETH moving into or out of known exchange wallets.
Transfers where a smart contract, bridge, or staking address changes how the row should be read.
The dashboard also supports top ERC-20 assets, while this page keeps the table ETH-only.
This Ethereum whale tracker focuses on large ETH transfers. The live table is filtered for ETH, so it does not mix Ethereum with Bitcoin, USDT, USDC, or other assets. Each row helps answer a few practical questions: how much ETH moved, where did it come from, where did it go, and did it move into or out of an exchange?
ETH can move between two wallets, but it can also move into a smart contract, staking address, bridge, exchange, or cold 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 ETH alerts as transaction evidence, not market advice. A large ETH deposit into an exchange may be worth watching, but it does not prove a sale. A large ETH withdrawal may point to a cold wallet, staking, or another wallet. Unknown wallet movement can still matter when it repeats or later touches a known exchange or service.
Ethereum whale monitoring works best when exchange moves, staking, bridges, contracts, and ordinary wallet transfers are kept separate.
Large ETH deposits into known exchange wallets. They are worth watching, but they do not prove the owner sold.
ETH leaving exchanges for wallets, cold storage, staking, or other known routes.
Large ETH transfers involving contracts. Check the destination before drawing a conclusion.
ETH movements connected to staking, unstaking, or validator services when labels are available.
ETH routes that may show movement between networks, cold wallets, or service wallets.
Check amount and USD value.
Read sender and receiver labels before the signal label.
Separate wallet routes from contract, bridge, and staking routes.
Open the transaction page when the destination needs review.
Start with the route. ETH moving from an unknown wallet to a known exchange is different from ETH leaving an exchange for a cold wallet or moving into a contract. The first route shows ETH arriving at an exchange. The second may show funds leaving an exchange. A contract route needs extra care because the receiving address may be tied to staking, a bridge, or an app.
Next, check whether the wallets are known. A labeled exchange, bridge, staking service, or app address makes the transfer easier to read. Unknown-to-unknown movement is weaker by itself, but it can become useful when the address repeats the same behavior or later connects to a known service.
Finally, keep the conclusion narrow. This page does not say that a whale transfer is a buy signal, sell signal, or price forecast. It gives you the ETH amount, USD value, transaction hash, sender and receiver 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 ETH whale transactions, exchange flows, contracts, staking, and alert delivery.
An Ethereum whale tracker monitors large ETH transactions and shows the amount, USD value, sender, receiver, known labels, flow type, contract route, and transaction link. Whale Alerts uses this for tracking transfers, not price prediction.
No. A large ETH transfer only shows movement. Exchange direction, wallet labels, contract destination, staking, and follow-up transactions all matter.
A transfer to a smart contract may be part of staking, a bridge, or an app action. It should not be read the same way as a simple wallet-to-wallet ETH transfer.
An exchange inflow means ETH moved toward a known exchange wallet. An exchange outflow means ETH moved away from an exchange. Neither proves buying or selling by itself.
Yes. This page keeps the public table focused on native ETH, while the dashboard also supports whale monitoring for top ERC-20 assets and stablecoins.
Yes. Whale Alerts publishes notable whale movements through Telegram alerts. The dashboard provides deeper filtering and history when you need to review ETH transfers beyond the public preview.