How Harbor moves MetaMask from the pioneer of in-wallet swaps to the anchor wallet for in-wallet price discovery.
Many in-wallet swaps are serviced by a tangled web of aggregators, intermediaries, and liquidity sources. Often it is not clear how many layers a swap passes through, or even what downstream venue ultimately services the trade. Each hop is an opportunity for value to leak away from the user, usually hand-waved away as "slippage".
This chart represents a best-effort attempt to map all possible flows of funds for MetaMask users and is based off available docs, announcements, and the MetaMask interface itself. It may not be 100% accurate in terms of what is available to MetaMask users. As the below case study shows, there are even more undisclosed routes that are obfuscated by aggregators.
MetaMask already has strong coverage on in-chain and same-ecosystem routes like USDT -> ETH. Uniswap and the broader EVM liquidity stack cover those pairs well, and MetaMask has spent years making that experience feel simple inside the wallet.
The weak point is newer and structurally harder: swaps between dissimilar chains. TRON USDT -> ETH, BTC -> ETH, and other cross-chain routes that cannot be solved by routing through the mature EVM ecosystem. They require bridging, chain-specific settlement and complex route orchestration. This is where MetaMask, like other cross-chain wallets, are forced into opaque aggregator paths where execution quality starts to break down.
This BTC -> ETH swap exemplifies the challenges users and wallets face when sending flow through aggregators. Though this swap appears to users as a Rango route via Teleswap, it touched 3 different blockchains, and at least as many aggregators or bridges, with fees and time spent at each step. The Polygon/Across legs are not reported by TeleSwap/Rango, meaning fees for this portion are completely obfuscated to the user.
EQE (Execution Quality, External) measures realized execution against an external reference price. The shape of each provider's distribution shows whether users are consistently landing near CEX reference.
Regular L1-initiated swaps execute against professional liquidity, while limit orders add a net-new user class: users who are price sensitive, speculative, or willing to set a trade and forget it.
The user still starts with a normal MetaMask swap. What changes is the liquidity underneath: Harbor turns that swap into taker flow against a shared order book quoted by professional market makers and other retail limit orders. Instead of relying only on AMMs, RFQs, or intent solvers, MetaMask can route into a transparent market where makers compete on price.
The same book unlocks a new order type for MetaMask users: long-lived limit orders. Users leave a buy or sell at the price they want, and it rests on the book until filled. The MetaMask Limit Orders demo shows the full flow: deposit, place a market or limit order, watch it fill, withdraw.
Intent and RFQ systems give market makers discretion to execute anywhere between the current market price, the minimum quoted output, and the user's slippage tolerance. A central limit order book removes that discretion. Makers compete in public to fill the order, users receive the best available price. Slippage is a byproduct of the bygone era of constant-product, AMM-based execution. Users should never face 2-3% slippage on major-pair swap, and limit orders directly address it.
MetaMask Swaps does roughly $250M/mo1 today. Binance does roughly $550B/mo in spot volume4. That means MetaMask routes about 0.045% of what a single CEX moves, despite a large wallet user base. The gap is market structure: CEX users get live books, limit orders, and competitive maker pricing; wallet users mostly get aggregator routes.
Harbor brings the CEX primitive into the wallet. A MetaMask user placing a BTC/USDT limit order should be able to get Binance-grade execution without leaving MetaMask.
The sizing question is how much active major-pair trading can stay inside MetaMask once users have CEX-style execution.
Power-law distribution used as a proxy. Replace with MetaMask's actual swap-volume-by-token breakdown for precise comparison.
MetaMask has meaningful exchange-scale reach, but without an order book it cannot capture the active trading behavior that still lives on CEXs.
Key insight: closing just 0.1% of the major-pair gap adds ~$360M/mo, more than MetaMask's entire public swap volume today. At 0.5%, the order book adds ~$1.8B/mo of new volume.
This is the proposed feature integration and product development path for the Harbor <> MetaMask partnership.
Industry-leading execution for the highest traffic cross-chain routes.
Increase coverage to the majority of swaps volume (~70%).
New product to capture execution-sensitive volume. Familiar swap-like interface, but with long-resting orders. Settlement always in-wallet.
Expand limit order product with signature-based trading: gasless and immediate. Users hold balances on Harbor, same concept as Hyperliquid Perps balance.
Chains: All chains/routes supported via swaps Pairs: All pairs supported via swaps