---
title: "Tether Freezes $344M USDT in Major US Crackdown"
date: 2026-04-23
author: "Kathleen Kinder"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/tether-freezes-344m-usd-in-ofac-compliance.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Cryptocurrency"
    url: "/crypto.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# Tether Freezes $344M USDT in Major US Crackdown

Tether has frozen over $344 million in USDT tied to suspected illicit activity in coordination with US authorities, marking one of its largest enforcement actions to date.

## Key Takeaways

- Tether froze $344 million in USDT across two Tron wallets linked to unlawful conduct.
- The action was coordinated with the Office of Foreign Assets Control and US law enforcement.
- The freeze highlights Tether’s growing role in global crypto enforcement efforts.
- Markets show no immediate rise in stablecoin depegging risk, despite regulatory pressure.

## What Happened?

Tether [confirmed](https://tether.io/news/tether-supports-freeze-of-more-than-344-million-in-usdt-in-coordination-with-ofac-and-u-s-law-enforcement/) that it froze more than **$344 million in USDT** held in two wallets on the Tron network after receiving information from US authorities related to illicit activity. The move follows an earlier onchain blacklist action flagged by blockchain security firm PeckShield.

The company said the freeze was carried out in coordination with the **[Office of Foreign Assets Control](https://coinlaw.io/ofac-sanctions-and-crypto-transactions-statistics/)** and other law enforcement agencies, although it did not disclose details about the underlying investigation.

> Tether Supports Freeze of More Than $344 Million in USD₮ in Coordination with OFAC and U.S. Law Enforcement  
> Learn more: <https://t.co/PFMCimX9hV>
> 
> — Tether (@tether) [April 23, 2026](https://twitter.com/tether/status/2047297827374514629?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## Tether Executes One of Its Largest Freezes

The frozen funds were spread across two Tron addresses that had been publicly visible prior to the action. One wallet reportedly held about **$213 million in USDT**, while the other contained roughly **$131 million**, bringing the total above $344 million.

Tether stated that the action was linked to **[sanctions evasion](https://coinlaw.io/financial-sanctions-statistics/), criminal networks, or other illicit activities**. CEO Paolo Ardoino emphasized the company’s stance, stating, “**USDT is not a safe haven for illicit activity.**”

The company uses a feature within its smart contracts that allows it to **freeze specific wallet addresses**, effectively blocking any transfers or movement of funds.

## Growing Coordination With Law Enforcement

Tether highlighted its expanding collaboration with global authorities. According to the company, it now works with more than **340 law enforcement agencies across 65 countries** and has supported over **2,300 cases worldwide**.

Since 2023, Tether says it has helped freeze more than **$4.4 billion in assets**, including over **$2.1 billion tied to US authorities**. Past actions include [freezing $225 million](https://coinlaw.io/tether-freezes-182m-usdt-law-enforcement/) linked to human trafficking investigations in Southeast Asia and additional enforcement actions involving hundreds of millions in crypto tied to money laundering probes.

The firm has positioned itself as a **proactive partner to regulators**, combining blockchain transparency with real time monitoring to act quickly against suspicious activity.

## Competition Heats Up as Circle Faces Criticism

Tether’s latest move also comes as its main competitor, Circle, faces criticism for its response to illicit activity involving [USDC](https://coinlaw.io/usd-coin-statistics/).

Industry observers and blockchain analysts have pointed to cases where [**Circle allegedly acted too slowly** in freezing funds](https://coinlaw.io/zachxbt-circle-usdc-freeze-delay-crypto-hacks/) tied to major hacks. One widely discussed incident involved nearly **$300 million in USDC** drained from Drift Protocol, where critics claimed faster intervention could have limited losses.

A lawsuit filed by a former user has even alleged that Circle failed to act while attackers moved stolen funds, further intensifying scrutiny on stablecoin issuers.

Tether, in contrast, said its **approach prioritizes speed and coordination**, aiming to stop illicit funds before they can be moved or laundered.

## Stablecoin Risks and Market Reaction

Despite the scale of the freeze, market indicators suggest that **stablecoin risk sentiment remains unchanged**. Data from prediction markets shows the probability of a major stablecoin depegging event before 2027 holding steady at around **3 percent**.

However, analysts note that the market remains thin, meaning **future enforcement actions or [regulatory developments](https://coinlaw.io/penalties-for-non-compliance-in-crypto-transactions-statistics/) could quickly shift sentiment**.

The involvement of US authorities in large scale freezes like this could increase regulatory pressure on stablecoin issuers, potentially influencing both [compliance standards](https://coinlaw.io/cryptocurrency-compliance-risks-statistics/) and market volatility in the coming years.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

In my experience, this is exactly where the stablecoin industry is heading. **Compliance is no longer optional, it is becoming the core feature.** I found Tether’s aggressive stance both strategic and necessary, especially as regulators tighten their grip on crypto markets.

At the same time, this raises a bigger question. If stablecoins can be frozen this easily, **are they truly decentralized in practice?** For users and investors, that trade off between security and control is becoming impossible to ignore.

Definition of Smart Contract. Link to full glossary entry follows the description.**Smart Contract**A smart contract is a self-executing program stored on a blockchain that automatically enforces agreement terms when predefined conditions are met, without intermediaries.

[Read more](https://coinlaw.io/glossary/smart-contract/)