According to South Korean outlet Tokenpost, citing Cointelegraph, on-chain investigator ZachXBT traced a Tron (TRX) address on June 11 that received roughly $120.2 million in USDT before rapidly dispersing it across multiple platforms: over $12 million flowed into a KuCoin deposit address, more than $8 million went into instant-swap services, and another $8-plus million was bridged from Tron to the BTC and ETH networks via NEAR Intents. The same entity reportedly placed large Monero (XMR) buy orders—XMR surged roughly 46% within a few hours during that window. Following the disclosure of this trace, Tether froze approximately $72 million of the USDT. It should be noted that all of the figures above—the individual transfer amounts, the 46% price surge, and the $120.2 million total—currently trace back to a single media chain (Tokenpost citing Cointelegraph citing ZachXBT). As of publication, we have not independently cross-checked these figures against Tether’s official statements or ZachXBT’s original posts. Readers should treat these numbers as “reported figures pending official confirmation.”
What This Has to Do With the USDT Card in Your Wallet
The core signal is a single sentence: A USDT balance is an asset the issuer can freeze — it is not ownerless cash. This particular freeze targeted an on-chain address suspected of large-scale suspicious fund movement, and ordinary users making routine deposits and purchases with their card are not in scope. But the event puts back on the table a fact that has long been downplayed: USDT is freezable.
The impact differs by card type:
- Custodial cards (MPCard, Bybit Card, OKX Card): your USDT is actually held in custody by the card issuer or exchange. If USDT you deposit originates from a flagged suspicious address, it could in theory be blocked at the deposit stage by risk controls, or you could be asked to provide Source of Funds (SoF) documentation. This is a different mechanism from Tether directly freezing an on-chain address, but the risk pathway is connected.
- Non-custodial / wallet-based cards: you hold your own private keys, but the freezing power at the USDT contract layer still sits with Tether — and this incident is precisely a contract-layer freeze.
Expected timeline:
- Within 7 days: unless your funds are directly linked to the frozen address, there will be no change to your account or card spending.
- Within 30 days: some exchanges/issuers may tighten source-of-funds screening on large USDT deposits, particularly those coming from instant-swap services or cross-chain bridges.
- Within 90 days: if ZachXBT discloses further linked addresses, exchanges may freeze downstream addresses in bulk, at which point retail users at the far end of the chain could be indirectly affected.
For more on how custodial cards handle fund ownership and risk control, see our MPCard review and Bybit Card review.
Historical Context: Tether Freezing Isn’t New, but the Trigger Is Changing
Tether’s ability to freeze addresses has existed for a long time. The company’s official transparency and asset freezing policy page has long stated it will freeze addresses in cooperation with law enforcement and compliance requirements. In past years, such freezes were mostly triggered by law enforcement agencies or sanctions lists (such as OFAC) — meaning there was first an official/judicial request, followed by the freeze.
What’s different this time is that the trigger was a public trace by an independent on-chain investigator. ZachXBT is not a law enforcement body, and his disclosure alone does not constitute a legal order. That Tether acted on it after publication suggests the issuer is now responding faster — and with a lower threshold — to “publicly disclosed suspicious signals” than before.
Compare this to the wave of freezes that followed OFAC’s 2022 sanctioning of Tornado Cash, where numerous addresses were frozen by various parties: that episode was a top-down compliance directive with a clearly defined scope. This case looks more like a bottom-up event driven by public scrutiny and investigation, with fuzzier boundaries. For ordinary users, this means the power to determine what counts as “suspicious” has partly shifted toward third-party investigators, making outcomes less predictable.
Compliance Boundaries: What’s Allowed, What’s a Gray Area, What’s Prohibited
Translating this into actionable compliance boundaries:
- Clearly allowed: depositing and spending USDT from clean sources (exchange withdrawals, legitimate receivables, your own funds) on your card. This covers the vast majority of readers and is unaffected.
- Gray area: frequently routing funds through instant-swap services, privacy coins (XMR), or cross-chain bridges to “launder” them before depositing to a card. This may not technically be illegal, but it is highly likely to be flagged by risk controls, and if an upstream address later gets frozen, your funds could be caught up in a freeze or require SoF documentation.
- Clearly high-risk / prohibited: depositing funds you know or should reasonably know derive from illegal proceeds. In most jurisdictions this can constitute money-laundering complicity.
Asia-Pacific users in particular should note that anti-money-laundering requirements for virtual asset service providers are tightening in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Japan. See our Hong Kong compliance guide, Singapore compliance guide, and Japan compliance guide for local VASP standards on USDT source-of-funds review.
Key Developments Worth Watching
- Further disclosures from ZachXBT: whether additional linked addresses or exchanges get named will determine whether the freeze spreads further downstream.
- Official statements from Tether: as of publication, Tether has not issued its own independent, transaction-by-transaction breakdown of this ~$72 million freeze; if it does, the figures and scope will become more reliable.
- Responses from KuCoin and instant-swap services: the report mentions over $12 million flowing into KuCoin — whether these platforms freeze the corresponding deposit addresses is worth watching.
- XMR price action and regulatory response: privacy coins often become a focal point in incidents like this; some exchanges have historically delisted XMR under compliance pressure, and it’s worth watching whether similar delisting or restriction moves resurface.
Editorial Recommendations
- Regular users of MPCard, Bybit Card, or OKX Card: no action needed. If you deposit and spend USDT from clean sources as usual, you are not in scope for this freeze.
- Users who habitually route funds through instant-swap services, privacy coins, or cross-chain bridges to “take the long way around”: consider stopping this practice immediately. This incident shows that convenience at the far end of the chain doesn’t buy safety — it raises the odds of being flagged and caught up in a downstream freeze.
- Users planning large USDT deposits to a card: keep proof of your fund sources (withdrawal records, transaction screenshots). Being able to quickly produce SoF documentation is often the key to getting a hold released if you’re ever questioned by risk control.
- When choosing a card, prioritize risk-control transparency over “no-KYC” marketing. For a side-by-side comparison, see The 5 Best USDT Cards for 2026.
USDT has never been anonymous cash — it is a digital instrument the issuer can pause at any moment. Keeping your fund sources clean and your documentation on hand does far more to protect the balance on your card than chasing on-chain invisibility ever will.