Stablecoin issuers Tether and Circle have blacklisted wallet addresses linked to Wallex, an Iranian cryptocurrency exchange, effectively freezing USDT and USDC balances and blocking future transfers for the platform's users.
The coordinated action by the two largest stablecoin providers renders the affected funds unmovable on-chain. When an address is blacklisted, the issuer's smart contract prevents any further transfers of the token to or from that wallet, leaving balances permanently frozen unless the issuer reverses the designation.
On-chain investigator ZachXBT flagged the Wallex-linked addresses, drawing attention to the connection between the wallets and the Iranian exchange. Both Tether and Circle subsequently moved to blacklist the identified addresses, cutting off Wallex's access to the two dominant dollar-pegged stablecoins.
1,800+
Wallet addresses blacklisted by Tether (USDT) to date, the Wallex freeze is the latest in a long pattern of sanctions-driven exclusions.
Source: Dune Analytics / on-chain data
Wallex operates as a cryptocurrency exchange within Iran, offering trading services to Iranian users. The platform has served as one of the avenues through which Iranian citizens access dollar-denominated crypto assets, particularly stablecoins used as a hedge against rial depreciation.
OFAC Sanctions Drive Compliance Action Against Wallex
The blacklisting is rooted in the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctions regime, which broadly prohibits American entities from facilitating transactions with Iranian parties. Iran remains one of the most comprehensively sanctioned jurisdictions under U.S. law.
Circle, incorporated in the United States, is directly subject to OFAC jurisdiction and has explicit compliance obligations to freeze assets connected to sanctioned entities. The company has acted on multiple occasions to blacklist addresses flagged under sanctions frameworks.
Tether, while registered offshore in the British Virgin Islands, has repeatedly stated its willingness to cooperate with law enforcement and sanctions authorities. The issuer has frozen hundreds of millions of dollars in USDT across prior enforcement actions, including addresses linked to OFAC-designated entities following the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
It remains unclear whether Wallex itself was formally added to OFAC's Specially Designated Nationals list or whether the freeze was a proactive compliance decision by both issuers. In similar past cases involving crypto laundering investigations, issuers have acted on credible intelligence before formal government designations.
Joint Blacklist Exposes Stablecoin Censorship Risk
The simultaneous action by both Tether and Circle underscores a structural vulnerability for users in sanctioned regions who depend on centralized stablecoins for dollar access.
~87%
Combined stablecoin market share held by USDT (Tether) and USDC (Circle), a joint blacklist by both issuers amounts to near-total stablecoin exclusion.
Source: CoinMarketCap stablecoin category
Both USDT and USDC smart contracts contain built-in blacklist functions at the ERC-20 level. When an address is added to the blacklist, the contract's transfer function reverts for that address, making the tokens completely illiquid without any recourse outside of the issuer removing the designation.
Iran ranks among the countries with the highest cryptocurrency adoption rates globally, driven in part by citizens seeking alternatives to the depreciating rial. USDT in particular dominates trading volume across Middle Eastern and sanctioned-country markets, making Tether's blacklist power especially consequential for users in these regions.
The Wallex freeze will likely reignite debate within the crypto community about centralized stablecoin censorship risks. Decentralized stablecoin alternatives such as DAI cannot be frozen at the issuer level, as they lack a centralized entity with blacklist authority over the smart contract. However, decentralized options carry their own trade-offs in liquidity and peg stability.
For Wallex users holding USDT or USDC on the platform, the practical impact is severe. Frozen balances cannot be moved, traded, or redeemed. Unless Tether or Circle reverse the blacklist designation, those funds are effectively lost to the affected wallets.
The action also arrives amid broader momentum in stablecoin regulation. Circle's USDC and competing stablecoin projects are navigating evolving compliance frameworks across multiple jurisdictions, with issuers under increasing pressure to demonstrate sanctions enforcement capabilities.
Meanwhile, the entry of traditional financial institutions into crypto, including major banks exploring Bitcoin ETF issuance, has intensified regulatory scrutiny on the infrastructure layer that stablecoins occupy. Compliance actions like the Wallex blacklist signal that stablecoin issuers are aligning more closely with traditional financial gatekeeping expectations.
Neither Tether, Circle, nor Wallex have issued detailed public statements regarding the specific addresses frozen or the total value of assets affected. On-chain analysts are expected to publish detailed breakdowns of the blacklisted wallets in the coming days, as reporting on the freeze continues to develop.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.