Frozen
$344 Million in USDT
Locked on Tron
In one of the largest single compliance actions in crypto history, Tether moved to freeze $344 million worth of USDT across two Tron blockchain wallets at the request of U.S. authorities — wallets now linked by U.S. officials to the Iranian regime.
A Landmark Freeze — and an Iran Connection
On Thursday, April 23, 2026, Tether — the issuer of the world’s largest stablecoin by volume — announced it had frozen $344 million in USDT across two blockchain addresses on the Tron network. The action was carried out in coordination with the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) and multiple federal law enforcement agencies, following intelligence that the wallets were tied to illicit financial activity.
Within 24 hours, the story grew considerably larger. U.S. officials told CNN on Friday that the frozen funds carried material links to the Iranian regime, including transaction trails running through Iranian exchanges and intermediary wallets connected to accounts associated with Iran’s Central Bank. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent confirmed the sanctions action, framing it as part of a broader Trump administration campaign to cut off Tehran’s financial lifelines as nuclear diplomacy stalls.
USDT is not a safe haven for illicit activity. When credible links to sanctioned entities or criminal networks are identified, we act immediately and decisively.
— Paolo Ardoino, CEO, Tether · April 23, 2026The Two Wallets
Blockchain security firm PeckShield flagged the two addresses after they appeared on Tether’s blacklist on April 23, before any official explanation was given. Together, the wallets held slightly more than $344 million in USDT at the time of the freeze.
According to Chainalysis, the two Tron addresses were regularly active years ago — moving tens of millions of dollars in single transfers, often to private wallets. U.S. officials noted the behavior mirrored patterns seen in other known IRGC-linked addresses. The wallets were blacklisted at the smart contract level, meaning no further movement of the funds is possible until cleared by authorities.
According to the U.S. Treasury Department, Iran’s central bank has increasingly leaned into digital assets — particularly stablecoins on the Tron network — to mask cross-border transactions and support trade flows under sanctions pressure. Blockchain analytics firms TRM Labs and Chainalysis estimate that Iran-related crypto flows reached billions of dollars in 2025 alone.
How Tether Can Freeze Funds
Unlike decentralized tokens, USDT is a centralized stablecoin — meaning Tether retains the technical ability to freeze or blacklist any wallet at the smart contract level. The company describes this as a feature, not a flaw: public blockchains create a visible transaction trail that investigators can follow in near-real time, something traditional cash networks cannot provide.
When OFAC or a law enforcement partner flags an address, Tether’s compliance team can restrict the wallet within hours — preventing any further transfer of funds. The frozen USDT remains in the address but is effectively inert, unable to be spent, sent, or swapped, until legal proceedings determine its fate.
A Growing Compliance Empire
This action does not exist in isolation. Tether has been systematically expanding its compliance infrastructure over the past several years, and Thursday’s move is a statement of that ambition. The company now reports collaborating with more than 340 law enforcement agencies across 65 countries, having assisted in more than 2,300 investigations globally — over 1,200 of which involve U.S. authorities.
Cumulatively, Tether has now frozen more than $4.4 billion in USDT to date, including $2.1 billion specifically tied to U.S. law enforcement cases. The $344 million freeze on April 23 ranks as one of the single largest compliance actions the company has ever executed.
A Pattern of Major Freezes
The Stablecoin Compliance Debate
The freeze arrives amid a broader, heated debate about what stablecoin issuers owe the public — and regulators — when it comes to stopping illicit financial flows. The controversy was reignited earlier this month when the Drift Protocol was exploited for $285 million. Critics argued that Circle, the issuer of the competing USDC stablecoin, moved too slowly to freeze funds connected to the exploit.
Circle pushed back, with Chief Strategy Officer Dante Disparte stating that the company only freezes funds when the law explicitly requires it or when court orders mandate action — not through unilateral judgment. Tether has taken the opposite stance, positioning itself as a proactive partner to law enforcement even before formal legal orders arrive.
The way to get at Iran at this point — because Iran is truly sanctioned out — is to go with the third-country actors enabling them.
— Daniel Tannebaum, Atlantic Council · Senior FellowThe fallout from Drift was swift: the protocol announced it would dump USDC in favor of USDT, citing Tether’s more assertive compliance posture. A class-action lawsuit against Circle followed. The episode cemented Tether’s narrative as the enforcement-friendly stablecoin — and its April 23 action is a deliberate reinforcement of that brand.
Geopolitical Dimensions
The Iran link elevates this story beyond a routine compliance action. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent confirmed the sanctions in a statement framing it as part of the Trump administration’s escalating economic campaign against Tehran — describing Washington’s intent to “follow the money” as diplomatic efforts around the conflict stall.
Iran has spent years developing techniques to route funds through third-country actors, shell companies, and now increasingly through decentralized blockchain infrastructure. Earlier in 2026, both Tether and Circle were involved in blacklisting a hot wallet belonging to Iranian exchange Wallex, while U.S. authorities sanctioned additional platforms accused of routing IRGC funds through USDT on the Tron network.
Some analysts caution against overstating the impact. Experts note that Iran has decades of experience adapting to economic pressure, and that the more consequential choke point may be the third-country jurisdictions — particularly China — that continue to enable Iranian trade flows. Still, the ability to surgically freeze $344 million in a matter of hours marks a significant expansion of the U.S. sanctions toolkit into the digital asset space.
What Comes Next
Tether has confirmed it is expanding further into the U.S. domestic market. The company recently launched USAT — a new stablecoin token built for compliance with emerging federal stablecoin regulation — in partnership with federally regulated crypto bank Anchorage Digital. The initiative is led by former White House crypto advisor Bo Hines.
Regulators and lawmakers are watching closely. With stablecoin legislation advancing on Capitol Hill, the question of whether issuers like Tether should be required — rather than just permitted — to freeze funds linked to sanctions is becoming a central policy debate. For now, Tether is volunteering. And with $344 million locked on Tron, Washington appears to appreciate the help.
