Key Highlights
- Tether burned 3 billion USDT, removing the tokens from circulation after large redemptions, while keeping USDT stable at $1.
- The company minted 1 billion USDT on Tron, holding it in reserve to prepare for future market demand and liquidity needs.
- Tether also announced a Bitcoin and stablecoin education initiative in Laos for 2026.
Tether, the issuer of USDT stablecoin, has burned 3 billion USDT, permanently removing the tokens from circulation.
According to data from etherscan, the transaction was initiated on Tuesday, January 20, 2026, at 14:56:35 UTC by the address “ 0xC6CD****a828.” Whale Alert identified the said address as a verified Tether Treasury address.
The tokens were sent to a burn address, which is a digital address from which coins cannot be recovered. This is a normal process for Tether to manage the supply of USDT when users exchange it for real money.
The transaction was logged on the Ethereum blockchain to provide a public record of the burn. Although the tokens were destroyed, the burn did not affect the dollar reserve behind USDT. This burn is about 3–4% of the total supply of Tether, which usually ranges between 80 and 110 billion USDT. The size of this burn makes it one of the largest ever.
Previous USDT burns
Tether uses two main ways to manage the USDT supply: minting new tokens when users deposit dollars, and burning tokens when they redeem them. Most big burns happen after large redemptions from institutions. The company also publishes quarterly reports to show the amount of reserves it holds.
Tether has burned large amounts of USDT in the past. The company burned 1.5 billion USDT in April 2021 and 2 billion USDT in July 2022. This latest burn is the biggest so far. So far, market response to the burn has been calm.
According to data from CoinMarketCap, USDT has maintained its $1 peg but with little fluctuations of less than 0.1%. Liquidity in major trading pairs like BTC/USDT and ETH/USDT went down slightly but returned to normal quickly.
Tether mints 1 billion USDT on Tron
The burn comes days after Tether’s first major USDT mint of 2026, creating 1 billion USDT on the Tron network on January 9. According to previous reports, the mint was an “authorized but not issued” transaction, which means the tokens were created but held in reserve, not yet released into the market.
Tether does this to prepare for future demand to keep liquidity ready for exchanges, institutional clients, and market makers.
Education and crypto access initiative
In another recent development, Tether recently partnered with Bitqik, a licensed cryptocurrency exchange in Laos, to launch a joint education program to teach people about Bitcoin and stablecoins in 2026.
The initiative, announced on Monday, would benefit students, young workers, business owners, and local communities. The program will offer seminars and online content designed for them to understand how Bitcoin, stablecoins, and blockchain technology work and how they can be used safely in everyday life.
Why it matters
Large USDT burns help keep the stablecoin balance with real demand. When people redeem USDT for cash, removing extra tokens helps prevent oversupply.
This process helps maintain its $1 price and shows that Tether can handle large cash redemptions without problem. It also keeps USDT trustworthy for exchanges and businesses that use the stablecoin.
Also Read: Chainlink Launches 24/5 Data Streams for U.S. Stocks and ETFs

