What this page tracks
This USDT whale tracker focuses on large Tether transfers on Ethereum and Tron. The public table is filtered for USDT, so it does not mix stablecoin movement with BTC, ETH, USDC, or other assets. Each row helps answer a few practical questions: which network carried the transfer, how much USDT moved, where did it come from, and where did it go?
USDT transfers often show where dollar value is moving. A large USDT deposit into an exchange may be worth watching, but it does not prove buying. A large withdrawal may go to a wallet, treasury address, bridge, or service wallet. The network matters too: USDT on Ethereum and USDT on Tron can move through different wallets and exchanges.
Use these USDT alerts as transfer evidence, not market advice. The goal is to make large stablecoin moves easy to check: sender, receiver, known labels, transaction hash, amount, network, and dashboard link. Mint and burn events should be read separately because they show supply changes, not normal wallet movement.