Bridge ERC-20 tokens between Ethereum and Linea
We recommend that only tech operators that are providing liquidity use Linea's native bridge to transfer ERC-20 tokens.
For everyday bridge transfers, we recommend you use the MetaMask Portfolio bridge, which aggregates bridging options across Linea and shows you the best rates. Alternatively, use one of the third-party bridges available to users.
ERC-20 tokens can only be bridged using manual claiming, which requires you to cover the ETH fee on the destination layer. Ensure your wallet is properly funded before beginning this process.
you see a difference in the transferred token amount, this could be a "token bridge decimal mismatch", which affects how the value is displayed. The chance of encountering this is quite low, but still good to know about. :::
The guide on how to bridge ETH shows how to use our bridge and appropriately fund your wallet.
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Go to the Linea bridge.
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Connect your wallet in the top-right corner of the page.
- Enter the token selection menu by clicking on the current token symbol (ETH in this case).
- Select one of the available tokens in the list. If the token is not in the list, use the search bar to find it by contract address, symbol, or its full name. Click on your preferred token to select it.
- You now can bridge this token, and it will be saved in your token list for future bridging.
Token bridge decimal mismatch
When an ERC-20 token is bridged from one chain to the other and the token has not been deployed on the destination chain, the Token Bridge Smart Contract will attempt to determine the “decimals” of the ERC-20 token. If the decimals cannot be determined by reading the origin ERC-20 token contract (e.g. a token contract doesn't adhere to the ERC-20 standard), it will default to 18 decimals.
This can result in the token quantities displaying incorrectly on the destination chain. For example, if a token has 16 decimals on L1 but doesn't specify the decimals in token contract, it will default to 18 decimals on Linea. Bridging 1 token from L1 will show up as 0.01 on L2. When you bridge back the 0.01 to L1, it'll become 1 token again.
Decimal mismatches are rare, since most tokens with specified decimals usually adhere to the ERC-20 standards.