This move positions Tether as a competitor to established wallets like MetaMask and Phantom, which have been dominant without the backing of a substantial stablecoin.
As stablecoin payment utility grows, with examples like SoFi's USDC integration with Mastercard, controlling the wallet interface becomes increasingly important.
Tether aims for tens of millions of new wallet users each quarter, potentially making Tether.Wallet one of the largest crypto wallet platforms within a year of its launch.
The wallet's key feature is its use of human-readable Tether names instead of hexadecimal wallet addresses, simplifying crypto payments. Transaction fees are paid directly in the asset being transferred, removing the need to hold separate tokens for gas, which has hindered mainstream adoption of Ethereum wallets.
The wallet supports USDT and XAUT across Ethereum, Polygon, Plasma, and Arbitrum, while USAT, Tether's US-focused stablecoin, launched in January 2026, is available on Ethereum. It also supports Bitcoin on both the mainnet and Lightning Network for low-fee microtransactions.
XAUT, representing ownership of physical gold, is included with USDT and Bitcoin, offering a unique asset coverage that no current wallet matches. Built on Tether's open-source Wallet Development Kit, the wallet aims to be accessible for mainstream users.
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino described it as "the People's Wallet," designed for a future where billions of people, machines, and AI agents transact seamlessly.
Tether's advantage over MetaMask, Phantom, and Coinbase Wallet lies in its distribution, leveraging the widespread adoption of USDT, which has a market cap of nearly $185Bn. This allows Tether.Wallet to enter the market without the cold-start problem that competitors faced for years.
Similar to Coinbase's X402 initiative, major crypto players are looking to control the entire stack from issuance to consumer payment layers. Tether's wallet launch follows this trend.
However, regulatory concerns remain. It is unclear if Tether.Wallet will trigger new compliance requirements in major markets such as the US and the EU, where stablecoin legislation is being actively developed. How regulators treat a wallet operated by a stablecoin issuer versus a standalone provider will shape Tether's growth strategy.
Tether crypto hasn't revealed specific fees or timelines for expanding to other blockchains, but initial wallet adoption rates in the first quarter post-launch will indicate if its distribution advantage translates into meaningful user conversion.