Check any Bitcoin or Ethereum transaction, address or block — paste it below, the network is detected automatically.
Examples: BTC txid (64 hex chars) · BTC address (1…, 3…, bc1…) · ETH tx (0x + 64) · ETH address (0x + 40) · block height (number)
Every Bitcoin and Ethereum transaction is recorded on a public ledger. An explorer is simply a window into that ledger: give it a transaction ID and it shows whether the payment confirmed, how much moved, what fee was paid and which block sealed it. Give it an address and it shows the balance and activity. No login, no permission — the data is public by design.
When you send or expect crypto, your wallet or exchange gives you a transaction ID (a long string of letters and numbers). Paste it above. “Pending” means the network has seen the transaction but no block includes it yet; “confirmed” means it is final, and every additional confirmation buries it deeper. If a payment seems stuck, check the fee — on busy days low-fee Bitcoin transactions can wait hours, while Ethereum transactions priced below the current gas rate wait until rates fall. For spending power, convert the amount with the live converter, and see current network conditions on the halving countdown page, which reads the same live Bitcoin chain data.
Paste the transaction ID (the long hash your wallet or exchange gave you) into the search box above. CoinZap detects the network automatically and shows the status, confirmations, amount and fee.
A transaction stays pending until a miner or validator includes it in a block. On Bitcoin this usually means the fee was set low for current demand — it will confirm when congestion eases. On Ethereum, pending usually clears within a minute unless the gas price is far below the going rate.
One confirmation means the transaction is in a block. Most services treat Bitcoin as settled after 3–6 confirmations and Ethereum after 12–30 blocks. Larger amounts generally warrant waiting for more confirmations.
No — and neither can anyone else from the blockchain alone. Addresses are pseudonymous: the explorer shows balances and transaction history, but not identities.
Bitcoin data by mempool.space; Ethereum data via public RPC. Queries run in your browser — CoinZap never stores what you search. Informational only.