Tether burned $3 billion USDT tokens on the Ethereum blockchain July 8, the largest single reduction in the stablecoin's circulating supply since February 2026.
The burn reduces total USDT supply on Ethereum by roughly 1.6%, according to DefiLlama data. Tether has not publicly stated a reason for the removal, which permanently destroys the tokens and tightens the pool of dollar-denominated liquidity available across crypto markets.
USDT has roughly $184 billion in total circulation across all networks, with Ethereum and Tron holding the largest shares. Tether reported $1.04 billion in net profit for the first quarter of 2026, with $141 billion in US Treasury bills backing its reserves, according to Reuters. The company publishes reserve attestations but has not yet completed a full audit by a Big Four accounting firm.
Large stablecoin burns reduce the liquid capital available for crypto trading, which can exert deflationary pressure on token prices in the short term or signal treasury management strategy. The $3 billion reduction comes as Tether prepares to issue USDT natively on Bitcoin through the RGB protocol v0.11.1, with UTEXO leading a commercial rollout expected as early as July, according to the company's announcement.
The burn also follows a period of heightened attention on Tether's ownership structure. Former Chief Investment Officer Richard Heathcote is working with PJT Partners to sell part of his 1.26% stake in the company, Bloomberg reported, with discussions still in early stages. A transaction at Tether's implied $50 billion valuation would make Heathcote's full holding worth about $630 million.
USDT originally launched on Bitcoin in 2014 through the Omni-Mastercoin layer before most activity shifted to Tron and Ethereum, where transaction costs are lower. The planned return to Bitcoin via RGB would allow USDT to operate inside Bitcoin's security model while enabling transfers through the Lightning Network for faster settlement. Tether Wallet and multiple exchange integrations are expected to support the launch.
Historically, large USDT burns and issuances have been monitored as liquidity indicators for Bitcoin and major altcoins. A sustained reduction in stablecoin supply can reduce buying power across exchanges, while new issuance typically signals fresh capital entering the market. The July 8 burn is the largest since a similar-sized reduction in February, marking the most significant supply contraction in five months.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.