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Atomic Swap | Bitcoin Glossary | Mapping Bitcoin

Atomic Swap

Protocol

Also known as: cross-chain swap, cross-chain atomic swap

A trustless exchange of one cryptocurrency for another without the need for a centralized intermediary. Atomic swaps use hash time-locked contracts (HTLCs) to ensure that either both parties receive their funds or neither does.

Overview

An atomic swap allows two parties to exchange different cryptocurrencies directly, without relying on a trusted third party such as an exchange. The word "atomic" means the swap is indivisible: it either completes fully for both parties or does not happen at all. This eliminates counterparty risk.

How It Works

Atomic swaps rely on hash time-locked contracts (HTLCs), which combine cryptographic hash locks with time-based expiration conditions.

Step 1: Alice creates a secret (S) and its hash H(S)
Step 2: Alice locks her BTC in an HTLC on the Bitcoin chain
        Condition: Bob can claim with S, or Alice refunds after timeout T1

Step 3: Bob sees Alice's HTLC and creates a matching HTLC
        on the other chain using the same H(S)
        Condition: Alice can claim with S, or Bob refunds after timeout T2 (T2 < T1)

Step 4: Alice claims Bob's coins by revealing S
Step 5: Bob uses the now-revealed S to claim Alice's BTC

    Alice                          Bob
    ──────                         ──────
    Lock BTC ──────────────────→  Sees HTLC
                                   Lock ALT
    Sees HTLC ←────────────────
    Claim ALT (reveals S) ─────→  Learns S
                                   Claim BTC

Requirements

Both blockchains involved must support the same hash function and have the ability to create time-locked contracts. Bitcoin's scripting language natively supports the opcodes needed for HTLCs.

Limitations

Atomic swaps require both parties to be online during the exchange process and currently have limited liquidity compared to centralized exchanges. Finding a counterparty willing to swap at an agreeable rate remains a practical challenge, though protocols like submarine swaps have extended atomic swaps to work between on-chain Bitcoin and the Lightning Network.