$3,500.00
1,000,000,000
Gwei
0.0002857143
ETH
$350.00
$3,500.00
$3,500.00
1,000,000,000
Gwei
0.0002857143
ETH
$350.00
$3,500.00
The Ethereum Calculator converts Ethereum (ETH) to US dollars and displays the equivalent value in Gwei — a common denomination used for gas fees on the Ethereum network. Ethereum is the world's second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization and the leading platform for smart contracts, decentralized finance (DeFi), and non-fungible tokens (NFTs).
Created by Vitalik Buterin and launched in 2015, Ethereum introduced the concept of a programmable blockchain — a decentralized computing platform that can execute arbitrary code through smart contracts. This innovation enabled an entire ecosystem of decentralized applications (dApps), from lending protocols and decentralized exchanges to gaming platforms and digital art marketplaces.
In September 2022, Ethereum completed The Merge, transitioning from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake consensus. This monumental upgrade reduced Ethereum's energy consumption by approximately 99.95% and introduced a staking mechanism where validators lock up ETH to secure the network and earn rewards (currently around 3-5% APR).
Unlike Bitcoin's fixed 21 million supply cap, Ethereum does not have a hard maximum supply. However, the EIP-1559 upgrade (August 2021) introduced a fee-burning mechanism that destroys a portion of transaction fees. During periods of high network activity, the burn rate can exceed new issuance, making ETH temporarily deflationary.
Ethereum uses a denomination system similar to traditional currencies. The base unit is Wei (1 ETH = 10^18 Wei), and the most commonly used intermediate unit is Gwei (1 ETH = 10^9 Gwei, or 1 Gwei = 10^9 Wei). Gas prices — the fees users pay for transactions and smart contract execution — are typically quoted in Gwei.
Our calculator converts ETH to USD, displays the Gwei equivalent, and shows how much ETH one dollar would buy at the current price. This is essential for portfolio tracking, gas fee estimation, and transaction planning on the Ethereum network.
Ethereum continues to evolve through its development roadmap, with upcoming upgrades focused on scalability (sharding, rollups), security, and sustainability. Layer-2 solutions such as Arbitrum, Optimism, and zkSync have already significantly reduced transaction costs while leveraging Ethereum's security guarantees.
The conversion formulas: USD Value = ETH Amount x Ethereum Price. Gwei = ETH Amount x 1,000,000,000 (1 ETH = 1 billion Gwei). ETH per Dollar = 1 / Ethereum Price.
The USD value reflects your Ethereum holding's worth at the specified price. The Gwei conversion is particularly useful for understanding gas costs — if gas is 30 Gwei per unit and a transaction requires 21,000 gas units, the cost is 630,000 Gwei = 0.00063 ETH. The ETH-per-dollar figure helps with purchase planning.
Inputs
Results
1 ETH at $3,500 = $3,500 = 1B Gwei
Inputs
Results
32 ETH (validator minimum) = $112,000
Gwei is a denomination of Ether equal to one billionth of an ETH (10^-9 ETH = 1 Gwei). It is commonly used to express gas prices on the Ethereum network. The name combines 'giga' (billion) and 'Wei' (the smallest ETH unit).
Gas is the unit measuring computational effort needed to execute transactions and smart contracts on Ethereum. Each operation has a fixed gas cost, and users bid a gas price (in Gwei) to have their transactions processed by validators.
The Merge (September 2022) was Ethereum's transition from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake consensus, reducing energy consumption by ~99.95% and enabling ETH staking for network security.
Validators stake 32 ETH as collateral to participate in consensus. They earn rewards (~3-5% APR) for validating blocks and can be 'slashed' (lose some stake) for malicious behavior. Liquid staking services allow participation with smaller amounts.
EIP-1559 (August 2021) reformed Ethereum's fee market by introducing a base fee that is burned (destroyed) and a priority tip for validators. This makes fees more predictable and can make ETH deflationary during high activity.
Layer-2s (L2s) are scaling solutions built on top of Ethereum that process transactions off-chain while inheriting Ethereum's security. Examples include Arbitrum, Optimism, and zkSync. They significantly reduce transaction costs.
Ethereum is a programmable blockchain supporting smart contracts and dApps, while Bitcoin is primarily a digital store of value. Ethereum uses proof-of-stake, has no hard supply cap, and supports a rich ecosystem of DeFi, NFTs, and tokenized assets.
Smart contracts are self-executing programs stored on the Ethereum blockchain. They automatically enforce agreement terms when predefined conditions are met, enabling trustless transactions without intermediaries.
No. Unlike Bitcoin's 21 million cap, Ethereum has no fixed maximum supply. However, EIP-1559's burn mechanism can make ETH deflationary during periods of high network usage, reducing total supply over time.
DeFi (Decentralized Finance) refers to financial services (lending, trading, insurance) built on blockchain without traditional intermediaries. NFTs (Non-Fungible Tokens) are unique digital assets representing ownership of art, collectibles, or other items on the blockchain.
Roboculator Team
The Roboculator Team explains calculations, planning tools, and practical formulas in clear language for real-life situations.
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