Direct answer
Before depositing or withdrawing, confirm the official Hyperliquid app URL, the asset, the network, the destination address, and the current bridge instructions. The official bridge docs say deposits are credited after more than two-thirds of staking power has signed the deposit, and withdrawals require validator signing before finalization. Crypto transfers can be irreversible, so source verification and small test transfers matter.
Current status
Deposit and withdrawal details move with interface and bridge updates. Review the live flow and official bridge docs before publishing screenshots or step-by-step transfer copy.
Step by step
- 1Open the official app link and verify the URL prior to connecting a wallet.
- 2Read the deposit or withdrawal modal carefully prior to signing.
- 3Confirm the asset, network, destination address, and expected fee.
- 4Send a small test transfer when practical, especially if using a new route.
- 5Wait for the deposit or withdrawal to finalize prior to sending more.
Fee and risk notes
- Wrong-network transfers may be unrecoverable.
- Bridge delays, validator signing, dispute periods, chain congestion, and interface changes can affect timing.
- The official bridge docs say withdrawals do not require Arbitrum ETH from the user, but a 1 USDC withdrawal gas fee is paid on Hyperliquid.
- This guide is a transfer checklist, not support, recovery, or legal advice.
Deposit checklist
- Use the official app link from Hyperliquid support.
- Confirm that the wallet address and network match the interface instructions.
- Keep enough gas or balance for any required source-chain transaction.
- Do not assume old screenshots or third-party guides are current.
Withdrawal checklist
- Confirm the destination address before signing.
- Account for the current withdrawal fee and expected timing.
- Wait for finalization before treating funds as settled.
- Save transaction hashes or bridge status links for troubleshooting.
Example first transfer
A careful first transfer starts with the official link, uses the intended wallet, verifies the displayed asset and route, sends a small test amount when practical, waits for the interface and explorer status to agree, then sends more only after the first transfer behaves as expected.
Bridge status is part of the task
Do not treat signing as completion. Deposits and withdrawals may involve bridge status, validator signing, finalization, fees, and destination crediting. Save hashes or status references and wait until the receiving side reflects the transfer before making downstream decisions.
Why old screenshots are weak evidence
Screenshots are useful for orientation, but they age quickly. Interfaces, supported assets, fees, routes, and status language may move. For an actual transfer, the live official flow is stronger evidence than an old guide.
Transfer failure modes
Most transfer failures start with simple mismatches: wrong network, wrong asset, copied address, spoofed URL, stale guide, unexpected wallet prompt, or misunderstood bridge status. The checklist exists to catch those plain mistakes while the only cost is time.
What to verify before signing
Separate the official instruction from your own assumption. Check the live route, asset, destination, fee, wallet prompt, source date, and any warning shown by the app. HypeBasis cannot recover funds or override the bridge, wallet, or destination chain.
Transfer routine
Use the official link, confirm the wallet prompt, match the asset and network, verify the destination, send a small test when practical, save status references, and wait for finalization before sending more.
What to avoid
Do not treat any transfer checklist as a settlement guarantee. You can follow each visible step and still face delay, bridge status confusion, chain congestion, or destination-side issues.
FAQ
Should I send a test transfer?
For meaningful amounts, a small test transfer can reduce operational risk.
Can this guide recover lost funds?
No. It is an educational checklist, not recovery or support advice.
What is the biggest avoidable mistake?
Using the wrong URL, network, asset, or destination address. Those are simple mistakes, but they may be irreversible.
When should I stop a transfer?
Stop if the wallet prompt, route, destination, asset, fee, or status message does not match what you expected. Resolve the mismatch before sending more.
Related guides
Continue with the pages that affect eligibility, cost, and trading risk.
Sources and corrections
How this site prioritizes sources, freshness, and corrections.
Risk disclaimer
Understand transfer, protocol, and market risks before moving funds.
Fees guide
Review trading fees separately from transfer and bridge costs.
Referral code
Eligible users can review referral terms before trading.
Sources
- Hyperliquid Support: Official linksAccessed 2026-05-04Supports: Official app, docs, social, and support-link verification before readers follow external Hyperliquid links.
- Hyperliquid Docs: BridgeAccessed 2026-05-30Supports: Bridge deposit and withdrawal process, validator-signed bridge context, gas-fee note, and bridge audit framing.
- Hyperliquid Docs: RisksAccessed 2026-05-30Supports: Smart contract, L1, market liquidity, oracle manipulation, and open-interest cap risk framing.