---
title: "Bank of Thailand and SEC Launch Joint USDT Audit"
date: 2026-07-13
author: "Kelvin Scott"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/bank-of-thailand-and-sec-launch-joint-usdt-audit.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Cryptocurrency"
    url: "/crypto.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# Bank of Thailand and SEC Launch Joint USDT Audit

Bank of Thailand Governor Vitai Ratanakorn said on July 11, 2026, that depositors moving more than 5 million baht in cash must disclose the funds’ source starting in the fourth quarter. The central bank is auditing Tether (USDT) trading volumes jointly with Thailand’s securities regulator.

## Key Takeaways

- Depositors moving more than 5 million baht in cash must disclose the funds’ source once Q4 2026 rules take effect, according to Bank of Thailand Governor Vitai Ratanakorn.
- Thailand’s central bank and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are jointly auditing high-volume Tether (USDT) transactions structured to conceal ownership or circumvent onshore remittance channels.
- Cash withdrawals above 5 million baht already require a commercial justification, a rule that helped cut large withdrawals by 35% since April and May.
- Physical gold withdrawals fell from a monthly average of 4,000 kilograms to approximately 700 kilograms after banks began flagging same-day buy-and-withdraw patterns to Thailand’s Anti-Money Laundering Office.
- Commercial banks tightened Know-Your-Customer checks at account opening and froze thousands of high-risk retail accounts tied to online gambling networks, the central bank said.

## What Happened?

Thailand’s central bank cannot police crypto transactions on its own authority. The **Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)** holds direct statutory authority over virtual currencies, which is why the **Bank of Thailand** routed its stablecoin findings there instead of acting alone. That jurisdictional split shapes how far this specific audit can reach.

The joint oversight team identified a subset of **high-volume Tether transactions** structured to conceal ownership details or circumvent standard onshore remittance channels, and handed the findings to the SEC for formal disciplinary and statutory enforcement action. The referral turns a data-sharing exercise into an enforcement pipeline: the BOT flags the pattern, and the SEC carries the legal weight.

For **Thai-licensed exchanges** that quote USDT as a base trading pair, that pipeline is the part worth watching. Transaction-pattern screening that once fed internal compliance reports now feeds a regulator with the power to act on it.

> 🇹🇭 Bank of Thailand + the SEC are opening a joint audit into high-volume [$USDT](https://x.com/search?q=%24USDT&src=ctag&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) transactions flagged for hidden ownership.   
>   
> One prong of a Q4 grey-economy crackdown that also forces source-of-funds checks on ฿5M+ cash deposits. [\#Tether](https://x.com/hashtag/Tether?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) [\#CryptoMarket](https://x.com/hashtag/CryptoMarket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) [pic.twitter.com/drp1qmMzPr](https://t.co/drp1qmMzPr)
> 
> — CoinLaw (@coinlaw\_io) [July 13, 2026](https://x.com/coinlaw_io/status/2076572539552452845?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## Cash, Gold and Banknotes Complete the Dragnet

The USDT audit sits inside a much wider net anchored by the same baht threshold. Commercial banks and state-owned financial institutions must verify a customer’s reason for using cash and assess whether the transaction could instead run through electronic transfers or cheques. Legitimate business transactions still go through.

Regulators are also weighing rules for large banknote exchanges, requiring anyone converting **1,000-baht** notes into smaller **100-baht** or **500-baht** denominations to explain why. That closes a channel structuring schemes have used to break large sums into less traceable units.

[Gold buying](https://coinlaw.io/gold-investment-statistics/) followed the same enforcement logic before stablecoins did: once lenders had to flag same day buy and withdraw patterns to the **Anti-Money Laundering Office**, the irregular volume the central bank had flagged largely disappeared. **Governor Vitai** framed the whole push as structural, not cosmetic. **Vitai Ratanakorn**, Governor of the Bank of Thailand said:

“

We have structural problems because resources are concentrated in the hands of large businesses, and we also face issues relating to the grey economy.

Vitai RatanakornGovernor – Bank of Thailand





## Implications for Thailand’s Crypto Exchanges

The common thread across cash, gold, banknotes and [USDT](https://coinlaw.io/tether-statistics/) is disclosure, not prohibition. Regulators are not banning large transactions; they are removing the anonymity that let them move without a paper trail. That is a materially different compliance posture than an outright stablecoin ban, and it leaves legitimate USDT activity on licensed Thai platforms untouched while narrowing the specific structuring patterns the audit flagged.

The sequencing also matters. [Thailand tightened cash withdrawals first](https://coinlaw.io/thailand-freezes-10000-crypto-accounts/), watched the 35% drop, then closed the deposit side gap the same logic left open. Applying that same withdrawal then deposit sequencing to stablecoins suggests today’s trading-volume audit is a first step, not a one-off review, and Thai exchanges built around USDT liquidity should expect the screening bar to keep rising rather than reset.

Regulators increasingly treat stablecoin structuring as a subset of financial-crime enforcement rather than a crypto-specific carve out, which is consistent with how [Cryptocurrency Adoption](https://coinlaw.io/cryptocurrency-adoption-by-country-statistics/) data shows Southeast Asian regulators tightening onshore rails as retail stablecoin use grows.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

This is a jurisdiction problem dressed up as a crypto story. Thailand’s central bank cannot regulate virtual currencies directly, so it built a data sharing pipeline that lets its own analytics feed an agency that can. The same disclosure logic behind the more than **5 million baht cash** threshold now applies to USDT, and that structure is the real news here, more than any single number in the audit itself, because it is reusable: the same BOT to SEC handoff can apply to the next [stablecoin](https://coinlaw.io/stablecoin-statistics/), exchange, or payment rail regulators flag.

The timing also tracks a broader pattern rather than a one-off crackdown. Cash rules came before gold rules, and stablecoins are simply the newest channel to get the same disclosure-led treatment. Thai-licensed platforms holding USDT liquidity have the clearest incentive to tighten their own transaction-pattern monitoring now, before the SEC’s enforcement track record on this specific referral gives outside observers a clearer read on how aggressively it will apply.