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TRON has integrated with Jumper in a move aimed at making cross-chain asset transfers feel more like a direct user action than a multi-step infrastructure process. With the integration live, users can bridge assets across 14 initially supported blockchains in a single flow, reducing the need to route through exchanges, withdrawals, and manual bridge selection before reaching TRON.
The integration’s core value is the reduction of steps required to move assets into and out of TRON. Jumper’s routing engine compares paths across 29 bridging protocols to identify the fastest and most cost-effective route. Users can transfer USDT, USDC, and other supported assets directly into TRON.
The integration also enables stablecoin swaps within TRON without leaving the interface, lowering friction between external liquidity sources and TRON’s transaction environment.
TRON is being positioned not as a niche destination, but as a stablecoin-heavy settlement layer whose scale requires easier access from the broader multichain economy. The stablecoin focus is presented as a practical advantage for users involved in payments, treasury movement, and low-friction dollar liquidity.
In 2025, TRON reported settling $7.9 trillion in USDT transfer volume and processing about $21.8 billion in average daily transfers. The network also states it can handle up to 2,000 transactions per second, with typical USDT transfer fees generally remaining below $1.
According to the article, this combination has supported TRON’s role as a major rail for cross-border value movement across Southeast Asia, Latin America, and Africa.
Beyond getting assets onto TRON, the integration is described as a way to connect outside capital to a broader DeFi and stablecoin environment while keeping the transfer flow intact. Once on TRON, users can access protocols such as JustLend and SunSwap, and optimize stablecoin positions inside TRON’s liquidity pools through a non-custodial route.
For Jumper, the move extends coverage across more than 63 blockchains. For TRON, it strengthens the claim that its liquidity and throughput are positioned closer to the center of the multichain market.

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