How to pay with crypto.
Never done it before? You will figure it out in about 5 minutes. Here is every step.
Twitterz accepts cryptocurrency only: USDT, BTC, ETH, SOL, BNB, TRX, USDC, and LTC. If you have never paid with crypto before, this might feel like a lot. It is not. Once you have done it once, it takes less time than filling out a credit card form. Here is the complete process from zero to confirmed order.
Which coin should you use?
Short answer for first-timers: USDT on the Tron network. Here is why.
USDT is a stablecoin pegged 1:1 to the US dollar. There is no price volatility between when you initiate the payment and when it confirms. You send $29 worth and $29 arrives. Done.
The Tron network (TRC-20) is fast and cheap. Transactions confirm in under a minute. Network fees are a few cents. Compare that to sending BTC, which can take 10 to 30 minutes and have variable fees depending on network congestion.
Any major exchange sells USDT. Binance, Coinbase, Kraken, OKX, and basically any other crypto exchange you have heard of. You can buy USDT with a credit card or bank transfer in a few minutes.
If you already have a preferred coin, all eight options work. This is just the easiest path for someone starting from zero.
Step-by-step: buying USDT for the first time
If you do not have any crypto yet, here is how to get it quickly.
Option 1: Binance. Create an account at binance.com. Complete identity verification (required, takes about 5 minutes with your ID). Navigate to "Buy Crypto" and select USDT. Choose your currency and payment method (card or bank transfer). Buy slightly more than your order total to cover network fees (e.g., buy $35 if your order is $29).
Option 2: Coinbase. Same process at coinbase.com. Coinbase is slightly more beginner-friendly than Binance. Their interface is more straightforward but their fees for buying crypto with a card are slightly higher. For small transactions, the difference is a dollar or two.
Option 3: Local crypto exchange. Many countries have local exchanges that support faster bank transfers. Binance P2P is also an option for buying from local sellers with your local bank transfer. This often has lower fees than card purchases.
Once you have USDT in your exchange account, you are ready to pay.
Step-by-step: the checkout process
Step 1. Go to the product page you want. Pick your tier and click the order button.
Step 2. Enter your X handle (no @ symbol needed) in the checkout form. This is the only account information required.
Step 3. Choose your cryptocurrency from the dropdown. Select USDT if you are following this guide.
If selecting USDT, a secondary option will appear for the network. Select TRC-20 (Tron) for fast, cheap confirmation. ERC-20 (Ethereum) also works but costs more in gas fees and takes slightly longer to confirm.
Step 4. The checkout page displays a wallet address and the exact amount to send. It looks like a long string of letters and numbers, something like TRC20_XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX. Do not type this manually. Copy it using the copy button next to the address.
Step 5. In your exchange (Binance, Coinbase, etc.), navigate to the send or withdraw feature for USDT.
Paste the wallet address from the checkout page. Double-check the first and last few characters to make sure it pasted correctly.
Enter the exact amount shown on the checkout page.
Confirm the network matches (Tron / TRC-20 if that is what you selected).
Submit the withdrawal.
Step 6. The checkout page shows live payment status. Within a minute of sending from your exchange, the payment will appear as detected. The order is confirmed once the required number of blockchain confirmations is reached.
Step 7. Order confirmation email arrives at the address you provided. This includes your order reference and a link to track delivery status.
Paying with Bitcoin (BTC)
BTC is the most recognizable crypto and works fine for payment. The practical differences from USDT are slower confirmation time and variable fees. Bitcoin transactions need 1 to 3 confirmations and depending on network congestion, that can take 10 to 30 minutes. Network fees also vary and can be a few dollars during high-load periods.
The amount to send is shown in BTC on the checkout page, calculated at the current BTC-to-USD rate. The checkout page has a timer (usually 30 minutes) because the BTC price used for the calculation can change. Send within the window.
If you already hold BTC, it is a perfectly fine payment method. If you are buying crypto specifically for this payment, USDT is easier and faster.
Paying with Ethereum (ETH)
ETH is similar to BTC: widely available, reliable, but with variable gas fees that can be meaningful for smaller transactions. During high network load periods, ETH gas fees can be $5 to $20 for a simple transfer. For a $29 order, that is a significant overhead.
ETH is available on every major exchange. If you already hold ETH, it works well. If you are buying specifically for payment, USDT on Tron is the cheaper option for small transactions.
Paying with Solana (SOL), BNB, USDC, LTC, or TRX
SOL: fast (transactions confirm in seconds), low fees (fractions of a cent), but price-volatile like BTC and ETH. Available on most major exchanges. Good option if you hold SOL already.
BNB: the Binance Smart Chain token. Fast and cheap on BSC network. If you have a Binance account, BNB is easy to buy and send directly from there.
USDC: another stablecoin pegged to USD, similar to USDT. Available on Coinbase and most major exchanges. Fees and speed depend on which network you use (Ethereum-based USDC is slower and more expensive; Solana-based USDC is fast and cheap).
LTC: one of the older cryptocurrencies. Reasonably fast (confirmation in 2 to 5 minutes), moderate fees. Less common on exchanges than BTC or ETH but Coinbase, Kraken, and Binance all support it.
TRX: the native token of the Tron network. Very cheap transactions. Available on Binance and major exchanges. If you want the cheapest possible transaction fees and speed comparable to USDT-on-Tron, TRX is the direct network token.
Common mistakes and how to avoid them
Wrong network. This is the most common crypto payment mistake. USDT exists on multiple networks: Tron (TRC-20), Ethereum (ERC-20), BSC (BEP-20), Solana, and others. If you send USDT on the wrong network to a Tron address, the payment will not arrive. Always match the network shown on the checkout page to the network you select when sending. The checkout page shows the exact network and address format for the selected coin.
Sending the wrong amount. Read the checkout page carefully. The amount shown includes the product cost. Send the exact amount shown — not your interpretation of what it should be, not rounded up, not with fees subtracted. The system checks for the exact amount and will not confirm partial payments.
Copying the address incorrectly. Crypto addresses are long and case-sensitive in some formats. Use the copy button on the checkout page rather than typing the address manually. After pasting, verify the first 6 and last 6 characters match what you see on the checkout page.
Payment expiring. The checkout page has a timer. For USDT and fast networks, this is not usually a problem because confirmation happens within the window. For BTC, you need to send the transaction before the timer expires (the transaction can still confirm after the timer, as long as it was sent before expiry). If the timer expires before you send, refresh the page to get a new address and amount (the price calculation may change slightly).
Exchange withdrawal delays. Some exchanges have withdrawal processing delays, especially for first-time withdrawals or withdrawals that exceed verification limits. Binance typically processes withdrawals in under a minute once approved, but some exchanges have manual review queues for larger amounts or new accounts. If your payment is delayed, check your exchange's withdrawal queue first before contacting support.
After payment: what to expect
Once your payment confirms, the order enters the delivery queue. You will receive an email confirming the order. The checkout page updates to show delivery status.
First followers typically start arriving within a few hours. Full delivery for standard orders takes 24 to 72 hours. For large orders at Growth or Scale tier, the drip schedule runs up to 7 days to maintain organic-looking growth velocity.
Your order confirmation email includes a tracking link that shows current delivery status and your 24-month warranty status. Bookmark it or save it in your email for future reference if you need to track a refill.
Security: keeping your payment safe
The wallet addresses shown on the Twitterz checkout page are generated by NowPayments, the payment processor, and are unique to your transaction. These addresses change with every order — this is by design for privacy and accounting reasons.
Never send payment to an address you received via email, social media DM, or any channel other than the checkout page itself. Crypto payment scams work by intercepting your payment flow and substituting their own wallet address. The checkout page is the only source of truth for your payment address.
If you receive a message claiming to be Twitterz support asking you to send payment to a different address than what the checkout shows, do not send anything and report the message. This is always a scam.
What to do if something goes wrong
If your payment confirmed on the blockchain but the order is not showing as confirmed after 30 minutes, contact support with your transaction hash. The transaction hash is the identifier for your specific blockchain transaction — your exchange will show it in the transaction history, or you can look it up on a blockchain explorer like Tronscan (for Tron) or Etherscan (for Ethereum).
If you sent to the wrong address (outside the Twitterz payment system), that payment is not recoverable. Crypto transactions are irreversible. Verify the address before sending — always.
Pick your package, enter your handle, and pay in crypto. USDT on Tron is the fastest and cheapest option for first-timers.