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Author Topic: Is it possible to transfer BTC between addresses in the same wallet?  (Read 3744 times)
royalfestus
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February 19, 2017, 01:51:24 PM
 #21



While you can do it, as you have seen from the posts preceding this one, why would you want to do that?  All those addresses come from the same SEED and/or all share the same master public key.  In fact on most of the better wallets when you send coins from one of your addresses, ANY coins left in the sending coin address are automatically moved to a new "change" address (Electrum as example).  Still, I can visualize why you might want to move coins from a publicly available address where you repeatedly receive coins.  There is NO harm in simply moving them to another address in the same wallet.  Just remember that all those addresses are mathematically related, should the MPK ever get discovered, OR if someone does a trace through the blockchain to follow your transactions from that one initial address.  You may not care about this, but for some, this it a factor worth consideration.  Just sayin!!
What will happen if MPK ever get discovered or someone followed the transaction?
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February 19, 2017, 02:05:35 PM
 #22

This is something I have also tried doing but I couldnt even get an headway. I have a new address added and funded it now I want to transfer from that new wallet to previous wallet but what I noticed was it seems the money didnt move out and I have had difficulty in this. For those who were able to perform this on blockchain.info kindly give the steps necessary to make this happen...
although i do not have any experience of that but my general view is that it may be possible because when you generate a new address which belong to your previous wallet. so there may not be any difficulties while transferring bitcoin to the same wallet.
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February 19, 2017, 02:08:29 PM
 #23

This is something I have also tried doing but I couldnt even get an headway. I have a new address added and funded it now I want to transfer from that new wallet to previous wallet but what I noticed was it seems the money didnt move out and I have had difficulty in this. For those who were able to perform this on blockchain.info kindly give the steps necessary to make this happen...
although i do not have any experience of that but my general view is that it may be possible because when you generate a new address which belong to your previous wallet. so there may not be any difficulties while transferring bitcoin to the same wallet.
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February 19, 2017, 05:15:46 PM
 #24

I don't get to think in wich case someone would need to send bitcoin to an adress wich belong to the same wallet ? It's like your have money in your left pocket but you feel better to transfer the money in your pocket of the right side... I missed something or ?

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February 19, 2017, 05:22:13 PM
 #25

I've been curious of this as well.

Likewise but as far as i observed, one wallet has many addresses. So in that case, it is very possible to transfer btc in the same wallet yet different addresses. But whats the point if the owner transfers btc to his own wallet? Just wondering haha
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February 19, 2017, 05:30:26 PM
 #26

I've been doing this on the blockchain wallet since I was a newbie because from what my understanding is, bitcoin addresses are unique individual receivers and senders of transactions that can be grouped into a wallet but grouping them into a single wallet does not restrict or hinder them for keeping that uniqueness at the end of the day. Besides, a single address receives one certain tx but the rest of the addresses in the wallet does not receive what address A received.

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February 20, 2017, 08:03:39 AM
 #27

There is more than one address in a wallet. We can receive different payments using these addresses. But all the pays are in the same wallet. When we make an address payment, we will send our through which address.

For example, MyWallet is my purse. I have my A, B, C, D addresses in this wallet.

A: 0.2 BTC
B: 0.1 BTC
C: 0.7 BTC
D: 0 BTC

MyWallet: 1 BTC

I want to send the address bitcoin to D. Now when I write address D in my wallet, 0.5 BTC will be sent from which address.

It is not problem in wallet like coinbase, blockchain.info. You can easily switch your BTC between ur addresses with fee 10000 satoshi.

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February 20, 2017, 08:13:02 AM
 #28

this is a difficult and interesting questions. we often do not notice his wallet in it. after reading your topic, I suddenly felt more curious. I think we should do the experiment with it. I'll be quite happy if we can find the answers. Let's do it
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February 20, 2017, 08:13:28 AM
 #29

There is more than one address in a wallet. We can receive different payments using these addresses. But all the pays are in the same wallet. When we make an address payment, we will send our through which address.

For example, MyWallet is my purse. I have my A, B, C, D addresses in this wallet.

A: 0.2 BTC
B: 0.1 BTC
C: 0.7 BTC
D: 0 BTC

MyWallet: 1 BTC

I want to send the address bitcoin to D. Now when I write address D in my wallet, 0.5 BTC will be sent from which address.

It is not problem in wallet like coinbase, blockchain.info. You can easily switch your BTC between ur addresses with fee 10000 satoshi.
Its possible with Blockchain.info, haven't experienced with other wallets providing the same feature. Personally this feature is not used as its just to help us transact from different bitcoin addresses.
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February 20, 2017, 09:02:33 AM
 #30

yes whenever i tap on receive button on blockchain i get different address and and money used to get allocated in various wallet address and finally to buy something i had to transfer  all bitcoin to one address but it takes transaction charge for me. And its really irritating for me.
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February 20, 2017, 12:49:01 PM
 #31

There is more than one address in a wallet. We can receive different payments using these addresses. But all the pays are in the same wallet. When we make an address payment, we will send our through which address.

For example, MyWallet is my purse. I have my A, B, C, D addresses in this wallet.

A: 0.2 BTC
B: 0.1 BTC
C: 0.7 BTC
D: 0 BTC

MyWallet: 1 BTC

I want to send the address bitcoin to D. Now when I write address D in my wallet, 0.5 BTC will be sent from which address.

I also have the same situation but compared to you i only have two address. I am using blockchain.info wallets and I am the fixed address and the changing address. But there are actually two wallets that there is on my account. In my experience there are options as to where will you charge the bitcoins that you will send. You can select from where or which wallet are you going to will take from.
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February 23, 2017, 10:36:15 PM
 #32

Is it possible to transfer BTC between addresses in the same wallet?

Yes.

0.5 BTC will be sent from which address.

Bitcoin is NOT sent FROM ADDRESSES.  It is sent TO ADDRESSES.

Bitcoin addresses are NOT account numbers. They are more like an invoice number.  They provide you a way to determine who sent the money, when they sent it, and why they sent it.

If you were a merchant and you sold 4 items to 3 different people, then you sent each customer a different invoice to be paid:

Invoice A: $0.20
Invoice B: $0.10
Invoice C: $0.70

The total amount that your business would receive once all payments were received would be $1.00.

Then if you sent $0.50 from your checking account to your savings account, the $0.50 would be sent from which invoice?

It's a silly question, isn't it?  It isn't sent "from" an invoice.

Now, you could keep track of the individual payments and store them all separately (like a bitcoin wallet does).  Then when you spend it, you could choose specific coins to spend (like a bitcoin wallet does).  In that case, you could say that this money being spent was RECEIVED as part of a specific invoice.  You aren't "spending from" the invoice, but you can be aware of specifically which invoice payment provided the units you are using.

If that's what you are asking:
Which of the payments previously received will be spent?

Then the answer is:
It depends on your wallet.  The wallet gets to choose which of the unspent transaction outputs to spend.  The creator of the wallet implements an algorithm for making that decision.  Some wallets also provide advanced features commonly called "coin control" which allow the user to specify which unspent transaction outputs they want to spend.

I understand the invoice example. Bitcoin addresses are not account numbers. Bitcoin addresses are more like invoice numbers. Ok.

Yes, that's what I really want to learn. "Which of the payments previously received will be spent?"

I transferred BTC from my wallet to D. The wallet decided according to its own algorithm. Bitcoin transfer to address D has been performed.
Now, when I check address D at blockchain.info, which one will appear as the transfer address? A, B, C ?

Also would I have a problem if I wanted to transfer 0.8 BTC? I have a total of 1 BTC in my wallet. But none of the addresses in the wallet have 0.8 BTC. What would happen in such a situation?
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February 23, 2017, 10:56:14 PM
 #33

For example, MyWallet is my purse. I have my A, B, C, D addresses in this wallet.

A: 0.2 BTC
B: 0.1 BTC
C: 0.7 BTC
D: 0 BTC

MyWallet: 1 BTC

I want to send the address bitcoin to D. Now when I write address D in my wallet, 0.5 BTC will be sent from which address.
In past blockchain.info have feature to send out bitcoin with multiple bitcoin address to single bitcoin address in one transaction but it is not possible this days. But if you have all of this four addresses imported in blockchain.info wallet than you will have ability to send out bitcoin from one address to another.

Both A and B don't have enough bitcoin to send out 0.5BTC so It should be address C. If you send 0.5BTC from C to D you will have following input and output.

C 0.70BTC ---------> C 0.20BTC
                         D 0.50BTC

Is there a logic like this when sending bitcoin? Does not the total amount of bitcoin in my wallet be my total balance?

What would happen if I tried to send 0.75 BTC?
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February 24, 2017, 04:20:00 AM
 #34

I understand the invoice example. Bitcoin addresses are not account numbers. Bitcoin addresses are more like invoice numbers. Ok.

Great.  Glad to hear it.

- snip -
If that's what you are asking:
Which of the payments previously received will be spent?

Then the answer is:
It depends on your wallet.  The wallet gets to choose which of the unspent transaction outputs to spend.  The creator of the wallet implements an algorithm for making that decision.  Some wallets also provide advanced features commonly called "coin control" which allow the user to specify which unspent transaction outputs they want to spend.
Yes, that's what I really want to learn. "Which of the payments previously received will be spent?"

I'm not sure why you care.  Like I said, in most cases it isn't a very meaningful question.  However, I think I just answered that question, didn't I?

It depends on your wallet.

I transferred BTC from my wallet to D. The wallet decided according to its own algorithm. Bitcoin transfer to address D has been performed.
Now, when I check address D at blockchain.info, which one will appear as the transfer address? A, B, C ?

That depends on how much you transfer and which wallet you are using.  The wallet gets to decide.
It might be A.
It might be B.
It might be C.
It might be A and B.
It might be A and C.
It might be B and C.
It might be A, B, and C.

Also would I have a problem if I wanted to transfer 0.8 BTC? I have a total of 1 BTC in my wallet. But none of the addresses in the wallet have 0.8 BTC. What would happen in such a situation?

The wallet would choose multiple payments to spend. It would choose enough payments so that the sum is at least 0.8 BTC (plus any transaction fee you might want to pay).

So, given the A, B, and C that you mentioned earlier...
It might be A and C (for a total of 0.8 BTC)
It might be B and C (for a total of 0.9 BTC)
It might be A, B, and C (for a total of 1.0 BTC)

If the amount chosen is more than the sum of the amount you are sending plus the transaction fee, then the transaction will have two outputs (one for the intended payment, and another to send the extra back to your wallet).
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February 24, 2017, 04:50:53 AM
 #35

I have done this a  couple of times in my blockchain.info wallet but since it costs a little, I have never done it again. I just let my different wallets receive up to a certain amount and if I feel like selling them, I just send them to my local exchange and convert it to fiat. I have not tried other online wallets so I can’t say if the same is the case with them. Blockchain.info now also makes new addresses for you every so often, but the old addresses ceated before can still receive, sort of like their way of making more secure transactions.
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February 25, 2017, 12:11:34 AM
 #36

Thanks for the explanatory answers.
I liked the way the wallets work. The total balance in the wallet is the amount of bitcoin I can use.
It would not be easy to use wallet if it had only been sent from one address.
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February 25, 2017, 12:14:09 AM
 #37

There is more than one address in a wallet. We can receive different payments using these addresses. But all the pays are in the same wallet. When we make an address payment, we will send our through which address.

For example, MyWallet is my purse. I have my A, B, C, D addresses in this wallet.

A: 0.2 BTC
B: 0.1 BTC
C: 0.7 BTC
D: 0 BTC

MyWallet: 1 BTC

I want to send the address bitcoin to D. Now when I write address D in my wallet, 0.5 BTC will be sent from which address.

Yes but why would you it will cost you a fee and it aint 1 penny anymore. ?
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February 25, 2017, 12:18:11 AM
 #38

It is possible but why would you want to do that?
Only thing I can think of is from a topik I was looking at the other day something about double spending.
But don't think it will work for you anyways.

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February 15, 2024, 12:38:23 AM
 #39

It is possible but why would you want to do that?


For security reasons?

If you have a large amount of bitcoin in one address, you might want to break it up into smaller pieces.
If a hacker or scammer using block explorer sees you have a large amount of funds in one address, it could make it an attractive target for them.





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