Every wallet holds assets. The Asset Breakdown shows you exactly what — filtered, organised, and ready to read at a glance.
The Asset Breakdown section shows every asset held in the wallet — starting with ETH, followed by up to five of the most significant token holdings. It's designed to give you an instant visual overview of what this wallet actually contains.
ETH is shown first because it's the native currency of Ethereum and the most important asset to understand. The ETH card shows the exact balance with four decimal places. For wallets with large balances, thousands separators are applied automatically — so you'll see "32,450.06 ETH" rather than a confusing string of digits.
After ETH, the five most significant token holdings are displayed as cards. Each card shows the token symbol and the balance — formatted for readability. Large balances use shorthand notation: 300B for 300 billion, 96M for 96 million, and so on. This is common for meme coins and tokens with large supplies.
One of the most important things cryptoucan.xyz does behind the scenes is filter out spam tokens. These are tokens sent unsolicited to wallets — usually as part of phishing schemes where the token name contains a URL or a promise of rewards. Our filter removes tokens whose names or symbols contain URLs, words like "claim", "reward", "airdrop", or "visit", names longer than 30 characters, and known phishing patterns.
This means the tokens you see in the Asset Breakdown are the ones actually worth looking at — not the noise.
Below the token cards, you'll see the total number of unique tokens ever detected in this wallet (after spam filtering), along with a link to view all assets on Etherscan. This gives you the full picture if you want to dig deeper.
See the full asset breakdown of any Ethereum wallet — ETH, tokens, and more.
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