Large USDT transfers
High-value Tether movements ranked by recency and size across supported networks.
Track large USDT transfers on Ethereum and Tron with amount, network, sender, receiver, exchange direction, mint or burn labels when available, and transaction links. Use it to see where big stablecoin transfers are moving, not as a buy or sell signal.
A USDT-only preview from the public whale feed. Open a row to check the network, amount, sender, receiver, flow type, and transaction link.
Use the dashboard for full filtering, longer history, and known wallet labels.
High-value Tether movements ranked by recency and size across supported networks.
Ethereum and Tron rows shown separately because the network changes how the transfer should be read.
USDT moving into or out of known exchanges, treasury wallets, and service wallets.
Stablecoin supply events and bridge routes separated from ordinary wallet movement.
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.
A useful USDT feed separates exchange moves, treasury wallets, mint and burn events, bridges, and ordinary wallet transfers.
Large USDT deposits into known exchange wallets. They are worth watching, but they do not prove buying activity.
USDT leaving exchanges for wallets, treasury addresses, service wallets, or other known destinations.
Large USDT movements involving issuer, treasury, reserve, or service wallets when those labels are available.
New USDT supply or supply reduction. Check where the funds move next before drawing a conclusion.
USDT movement that may connect Ethereum, Tron, exchanges, wallets, or bridges.
Check the network before the amount.
Read sender and receiver labels before the signal label.
Separate exchange flows from treasury, mint, burn, and bridge routes.
Open the transaction page when a row needs a closer look.
Start with the route and network. USDT sent from an unknown wallet to a known exchange is different from USDT leaving an exchange for a wallet, treasury address, or bridge. Ethereum and Tron rows should also be read separately because the same asset can move through different wallet systems. A USDT whale transaction is a transfer first. It is not a trading conclusion by itself.
Next, check the known labels. A known exchange, treasury address, bridge, or service wallet makes the transfer easier to read than an unknown-to-unknown route. Unknown wallet movement can still matter when the address repeats a pattern, sends in stages, or later connects to a known exchange or service.
Finally, keep mint and burn events in their own bucket. A USDT mint can expand available USDT supply, but the important follow-up is where that supply moves next. A burn can reduce supply on a network, but it should not be confused with a whale buying or selling a crypto asset. The page gives you transaction evidence without turning every alert into a market call.
Whale Alerts monitors large transfers across every coin below. Open a tracker for the live feed, or start from the full whale transactions index.
Short answers about USDT whale transactions, exchange flows, treasury movement, mint and burn events, bridge routes, known labels, and alert delivery.
A USDT whale tracker monitors large Tether transactions and shows the network, amount, sender, receiver, known labels, flow type, and transaction link. Whale Alerts uses this for tracking transfers, not price prediction.
No. A large USDT transfer shows stablecoin movement. It may be an exchange deposit, wallet transfer, treasury move, bridge move, or service-wallet transfer. The route and follow-up transactions matter.
USDT can move through different networks with different wallets, fees, and exchanges. A USDT transfer on Ethereum should not be read the same way as a USDT transfer on Tron without checking labels and route.
An exchange inflow means USDT moved toward a known exchange wallet. An exchange outflow means USDT moved away from an exchange. Neither proves buying or selling by itself.
Mint and burn rows should be separated from normal user transfers. A mint can expand available on-chain dollar supply, while a burn can reduce supply on a network. The next route after the event is often the more useful detail.
Yes. Whale Alerts publishes notable whale movements through Telegram alerts. The dashboard provides deeper filtering, history, and known wallet labels when you need to inspect USDT transfers beyond the public preview.