Tether (USDT) Blacklist Address Checker
An instant query to the USDT smart contract on TRON and Ethereum: is the address on the issuer's blacklist. This is the primary source — the very contract that physically blocks transfers. Free, no registration.
Same check right in Telegram: send an address to the bot and get the verdict in 2 seconds — handy before every P2P deal.
Open the botHow this check works
- You enter a TRON (T…) or Ethereum (0x…) address — the network is detected automatically.
- The server makes a direct call to the USDT smart contract's blacklist function via public blockchain nodes — no intermediaries, no databases.
- The contract's answer is binary: the address either is on the issuer's blacklist or is not. A primary-source fact, not an estimate.
Frequently asked questions
How is this different from an AML check?
AML services compute a probabilistic risk score over the transaction graph. Our checker asks the USDT contract itself whether the issuer blocked the address. A binary fact. A clean answer here does not guarantee a low risk score on an exchange — different control layers.
Address is blacklisted — are the funds lost forever?
Not necessarily. Tether lifts restrictions via a legal procedure upon documented non-involvement: forensic report + affidavit + Source of Funds. Months of work, no guarantees — but the path exists. See the USDT restriction guide.
Do you store the addresses I check?
Yes, anonymously (address, network, result, time) — for aggregated freeze statistics. Blockchain addresses are public anyway; the checker collects no personal data.
Free preliminary case assessment
Describe your situation — we will return an honest assessment: what is realistically possible, how long it takes and what it costs. No "guaranteed unlocks" — they do not exist; compliance decides.