Tether froze $344M in USDT across two blockchain addresses on April 23, 2026, acting on information from the Office of Foreign Assets Control and U.S. law enforcement in a coordinated action that simultaneously added two Central Bank of Iran-linked crypto addresses to OFAC’s sanctions list, marking the latest advancement in the Iran stablecoin drama.
Blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis published its analysis four days later, mapping a layered financial pipeline running from Iranian oil revenues through brokers, intermediary wallets, DeFi bridges, and back into accounts affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
OFFICIAL: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent FREEZES $344 MILLION in Iranian crypto
"We will follow the money that Tehran is desperately attempting to move outside of the country and target all financial lifelines tied to the regime." pic.twitter.com/1zBfrk5a0H
— Altcoin Daily (@AltcoinDaily) April 24, 2026
The detail most headlines are missing is what this action reveals about a belief millions of stablecoin holders carry quietly: that USDT works like digital cash that no one can touch. This story is direct evidence that it doesn’t – and understanding why matters whether you’re in Tehran or Toronto.
USDT’s total market cap currently sits above $144Bn, making it by far the largest stablecoin in circulation and the asset of choice for both legitimate users and, as this case shows, state-level sanctions evaders.
What the Chainalysis Iran USDT Trace Actually Reveals
OFAC recently added 2 crypto addresses to its Central Bank of Iran (CBI) designation. Concurrently, Tether froze $344 million in USDT tied to these wallets, disrupting funds linked to illicit oil sales & the IRGC. Read our on-chain analysis: https://t.co/JZNThH9t9M
— Chainalysis (@chainalysis) April 27, 2026
Tether, the issuer of USDT, has a master key that allows it to freeze any wallet holding its tokens. When OFAC identifies a sanctioned address, Tether can blacklist it, locking the funds in place and preventing transfers. The $344M wasn’t seized; it was frozen, like funds in a blocked account.
Chainalysis traced the infrastructure around these wallets before the freeze. Funds flowed from brokers converting Iranian fiat into stablecoins, passed through intermediary wallets, crossed DeFi bridges to obscure the trail, and returned to Iranian crypto exchanges and IRGC-affiliated accounts.
They noted that Central Bank of Iran stablecoin funds were laundered through various protocols before being re-entered into the Iranian crypto ecosystem. Analyst Alireza Derakhshan was linked to coordinating over $100M in crypto tied to Iranian oil sales.
EXCLUSIVE: 99Bitcoin’s Readers – Earn $10 USDC When You Sign Up for Binance
Why This Enforcement Action Is More Complicated Than It Looks
The optimistic perspective is that the recent freeze shows stablecoin issuers acting as effective compliance gatekeepers. Tether has frozen assets worth $4.4Bn, including $2.1Bn at the request of the U.S. government, indicating ongoing enforcement efforts.
Conversely, skeptics highlight Iran’s sophisticated multi-layered routing system, which complicates tracing, suggesting that a significant amount may have moved undetected before this action. In 2025, illicit crypto addresses received over $154Bn globally, with stablecoins accounting for much of that.
Additionally, Iran’s transition from bitcoin to stablecoins was driven by the need for liquidity and stability, with findings showing the Central Bank of Iran accumulating $507M in USDT to support the rial and trade under sanctions. This incident underscores the centralized control of stablecoin issuers that has been downplayed in their marketing.

What the Iran Stablecoin USDT Freeze Means for Your Stablecoin Holdings
If you hold USDT and aren’t connected to sanctioned entities, the risk to your funds is low. Tether’s freezes are targeted based on formal sanctions designations, not random audits.
However, USDT is not censorship-resistant like Bitcoin; Tether can freeze wallets on request, making it a tool for financial enforcement.
Retail users face risks through intermediaries, as some exchanges may have unknowingly participated in sanctioned activities. If an exchange or wallet provider is caught in enforcement actions, access to your funds could be disrupted, even without wrongdoing on your part.
Keep an eye out for OFAC expanding designations to include more Iranian brokers and intermediaries, as the next round will show the extent of the network involved.
EXPLORE: Best Crypto Presales With Staking Rewards
Follow 99Bitcoins on X, YouTube, and Telegram for more crypto news and analysis.
The post Chainalysis Traces Iran Stablecoin Network After $344M USDT Freeze appeared first on 99Bitcoins.


OFFICIAL: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent FREEZES $344 MILLION in Iranian crypto




