Tether freezes USDT when addresses are flagged in connection with illicit activity, sanctions risk or law enforcement requests. Over the past 30 days, that power has been used at a striking scale.
According to BlockSec’s USDT Freeze Tracker, cited by Cointelegraph, Tether froze more than $514 million in USDT across 370 Ethereum and Tron addresses. The data shows that $505.9 million was frozen on Tron, while about $8.73 million was frozen on Ethereum.
The latest freeze data shows that Tether blacklisted 328 Tron addresses and 42 Ethereum addresses within a 30-day period. Once an address is blacklisted, the USDT held there can no longer be transferred.
The size of the freeze is notable because it suggests stablecoin enforcement activity is accelerating in 2026. BlockSec’s 2025 analysis found that Tether froze $1.26 billion across 4,163 addresses during the full year. The latest 30-day pace suggests 2026 could exceed that figure if activity continues.
Tron has long been one of the most important networks for USDT transfers because it offers low fees, fast settlement and deep stablecoin liquidity. That also makes it a major venue for high-volume stablecoin movement, including legitimate payments and suspicious flows.
The fact that most recent freezes occurred on Tron does not mean all Tron-based USDT activity is illicit. It does show that enforcement attention is heavily concentrated where stablecoin transaction volume is large.
Stablecoin blacklists matter because they show that centralized stablecoins are not fully censorship-resistant. USDT and USDC are issued by companies that can freeze assets at the smart-contract level.
For regulators and law enforcement, this is a useful compliance tool. It can help block funds linked to hacks, scams, sanctions evasion and other criminal activity.
For crypto users, it raises a different concern: stablecoins may function like onchain dollars, but they still depend on centralized issuers with administrative control.
DeFi protocols rely heavily on centralized stablecoins. USDT and USDC are used in lending markets, liquidity pools, bridges, derivatives and payments.
When stablecoin issuers freeze funds, protocols may be protected from stolen-asset flows. But blacklisting also creates operational risk. A protocol, wallet or liquidity pool that touches frozen assets may face liquidity disruptions, legal uncertainty or user trust issues.
This is why the stablecoin freeze debate is becoming more important as real-world asset tokenization, payments and institutional DeFi expand.
Tether has increasingly emphasized cooperation with law enforcement. Cointelegraph reported that the company has previously disclosed billions of dollars in frozen tokens linked to illicit activity over multiple years.
That compliance posture may help Tether defend USDT’s role in regulated markets. At the same time, it makes the stablecoin’s centralized controls more visible to crypto-native users who prefer censorship-resistant assets.
The next question is whether stablecoin freeze activity continues at this pace. Investors and DeFi users should watch Tron-based USDT flows, law enforcement announcements, stablecoin regulation and how protocols manage blacklist exposure.
Tether’s latest freeze data shows that stablecoins are no longer just payment tokens. They are also becoming a major layer of crypto enforcement infrastructure.
Tether can freeze USDT addresses linked to illicit activity, sanctions concerns, scams, hacks or law enforcement investigations.
Tether froze more than $514 million in USDT over a 30-day period, according to BlockSec data cited by Cointelegraph.
The recent freezes occurred on Tron and Ethereum, with most of the frozen USDT on Tron.
No. Once an address is blacklisted, the USDT held there cannot be transferred unless the blacklist status changes.

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