USDT was born on Bitcoin. Then it left. Now it’s coming back, and the upgrade is significant.
Tether has announced plans to issue USDT natively on Bitcoin through RGB protocol v0.11.1, with software lab UTEXO leading the commercial rollout. The feature could go live as early as July, with support from Tether Wallet and multiple exchanges expected to follow.
This is not a small footnote in crypto history. USDT currently holds a market cap of approximately $184 billion, representing nearly 60% of the total stablecoin market, which stands at around $311 billion. Bringing even a fraction of that liquidity back to Bitcoin’s base layer would meaningfully reshape how the network is used and perceived.
A homecoming, not a debut
USDT’s Bitcoin roots run deep. Tether originally launched the stablecoin in 2014 on Bitcoin via Omni, then called Mastercoin, making Bitcoin the first blockchain to host a major stablecoin.
The relationship did not last. As Ethereum and Tron offered faster transactions and lower fees, USDT migrated. Today, Tron hosts roughly $86 billion in USDT supply, while Ethereum holds approximately $80 billion. Bitcoin, for all its dominance as a store of value, became an afterthought for stablecoin activity.
RGB changes that calculus. The protocol allows tokens to be issued and transferred within Bitcoin’s UTXO security model, the same architecture that makes Bitcoin transactions verifiable and final. In English: USDT on RGB behaves like a native Bitcoin asset, not a bridged or wrapped approximation sitting on top of a separate system.
UTEXO has built the toolset that makes this practical, enabling USDT to move between Bitcoin addresses and compatible wallets without requiring users to interact with a separate chain. The Lightning Network integration is the key detail here. Lightning already handles rapid, low-cost Bitcoin payments, and USDT on RGB can tap into that same infrastructure for near-instant stablecoin transfers.
Why this matters beyond nostalgia
The timing is not accidental. Tether is navigating meaningful regulatory pressure, particularly in Europe, where its failure to secure a MiCA license led Revolut to convert customer USDT balances to fiat by August 2026. Diversifying USDT’s blockchain presence, and anchoring it to Bitcoin’s comparatively cleaner regulatory reputation, is a logical hedge.
Bitcoin’s regulatory standing has generally fared better than other networks in most major jurisdictions. Issuing USDT on Bitcoin does not solve Tether’s EU problem outright, but it does associate the stablecoin with an asset class that regulators in the US and elsewhere have been more willing to accommodate.
The broader stablecoin market context amplifies the stakes. Total stablecoin transaction volume reached $1.79 trillion in June 2026, with USDT capturing 32% of that volume. USDT has also recently surpassed Ethereum in market cap, making it the second-largest digital asset after Bitcoin by that measure. The stablecoin wars are not theoretical anymore, they are measured in trillions.
Tether is also not a passive actor in the Bitcoin ecosystem. The company owns over 100,000 BTC and has invested over $2 billion in mining infrastructure, with stated ambitions to become the largest Bitcoin miner. Embedding USDT into Bitcoin’s transaction layer is strategically consistent with that posture. Tether is betting heavily on Bitcoin, and this move extends that bet from the balance sheet to the product layer.
What investors and users should watch
The adoption trajectory of RGB-based USDT is the variable that determines whether this is a paradigm shift or an interesting experiment.
Lightning Network adoption has historically been slower than its proponents hoped. The user experience of managing channels, inbound liquidity, and wallet compatibility has kept Lightning largely in the hands of enthusiasts and specialized applications rather than mainstream users. USDT on RGB inherits those friction points unless UTEXO and Tether’s wallet team can abstract them away.
Here’s the thing: if they do pull off a smooth user experience, the implications are substantial. Bitcoin holders who currently need to move assets to Ethereum or Tron to access USDT would have a native option. BTC and USDT trading pairs could potentially settle directly on Bitcoin without routing through a third-party chain. That reduces counterparty risk and simplifies the settlement stack for traders who prefer Bitcoin’s security model.
For the broader stablecoin market, a successful RGB rollout introduces genuine competition to Tron’s dominance in the USDT supply distribution. Tron built its USDT lead partly on low fees and fast finality. Lightning-powered USDT on Bitcoin could match or beat those characteristics while offering the added credibility of Bitcoin’s underlying security.
The risks are real too. Multi-chain USDT creates fragmentation. Liquidity spread across Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Tron means thinner pools on each chain, which can introduce slippage and arbitrage complexity for large movers. Execution risk is also non-trivial. RGB v0.11.1 is live on mainnet, but the difference between a protocol being technically functional and it being robustly supported by exchanges and wallets at scale is a long road that many promising projects have started and not finished.
Watch exchange support announcements as the clearest signal of real adoption. If major platforms add native Bitcoin USDT pairs routed through RGB rather than a bridged equivalent, that is confirmation the rollout is gaining traction. If exchange integration stalls or wallets require manual workarounds, the commercial rollout will remain a developer-facing story rather than a market-moving one.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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