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South Korea Bans Corporate USDT: What Individual Users Actually Need to Know

South Korea lets 3,500 companies invest in crypto but excludes USDT and USDC. Individual users are unaffected. Here is what changed and what it means for your transfers.

In March 2026, South Korea's Financial Services Commission confirmed what the industry had been bracing for: the country's 3,500 listed companies can now invest in digital assets for the first time in nine years, but USDT and USDC are explicitly excluded. The headlines made it sound like a stablecoin ban. It is not. If you are an individual sending USDT in Korea, almost nothing changes for you. But the shift reveals something important about where the Korean market is heading.

What Actually Happened

The sequence matters. In 2017, South Korea banned all listed companies from investing in digital assets. For nine years, Korean corporations watched while companies in the US, Europe, and Japan accumulated Bitcoin on their balance sheets.

In early 2026, the Financial Services Commission (FSC) began drafting guidelines to lift that ban. But when the framework was released following a March 5, 2026 Virtual Asset Committee meeting, dollar-pegged stablecoins were excluded. As reported by Herald Economy (Korea's leading financial publication), the decision ties directly to the Foreign Exchange Transaction Act, which does not yet recognise stablecoins as approved instruments for cross-border payments.

The corporate investment cap is also conservative: 5% of total capital. Bitcoin and Ethereum are permitted. USDT and USDC are not. For now.

Why USDT Was Excluded

The exclusion is legal, not ideological. The Foreign Exchange Transaction Act requires foreign payment instruments to be processed through designated foreign exchange banks. USDT does not fit that structure. A partial amendment was submitted to the National Assembly in October 2025, but it is still under review.

There is a strategic dimension too. According to DL News reporting from December 2025, President Lee Jae Myung has made a Korean won-backed stablecoin a national priority, viewing it as essential for monetary sovereignty in a market dominated by US dollar stablecoins. Excluding USDT from corporate use creates space for domestic alternatives to gain traction first.

Meanwhile, Korean companies are not waiting. Multiple outlets report that some firms already use personal wallets or overseas OTC platforms for stablecoin payments in international trade. The exclusion covers what is officially permitted, not what is technically possible.

Impact on Individual Users

If you are a regular user sending USDT from Upbit or Bithumb: nothing changes. The corporate exclusion applies only to listed companies operating within the new investment framework. Individual trading accounts, personal wallet holdings, P2P transactions, TRC-20 withdrawals, and cross-border transfers are completely unaffected.

Upbit and Bithumb, which together handle over 80% of Korean trading volume (CoinReporter, March 2026), continue to list USDT pairs and support TRC-20 withdrawals.

One thing to watch: stablecoin liquidity on Korean exchanges dropped sharply in early 2026. CoinReporter noted a 55% plunge in stablecoin balances, with capital rotating into equities. Spreads on USDT/KRW pairs may be wider than usual for larger orders. For regular-sized transfers, the impact is minimal.

The Won Stablecoin Push

Korea is building its own stablecoin ecosystem. Kakao Group announced plans for a won-backed stablecoin connecting KakaoPay, KakaoBank, and KakaoTalk. Naver Financial, partnered with Dunamu (Upbit's parent), is developing a blockchain-AI payments platform. BC Card completed pilot testing for QR-based stablecoin payments.

If these succeed, Korea could have a domestic stablecoin ecosystem rivalling USDT for local payments. But for international transfers, remittances, and cross-border P2P trading, USDT on Tron remains the practical choice. Won stablecoins are designed for domestic use. USDT is designed for the world.

Your Transfer Fees Have Not Changed

Regulations shift. The network fee does not. Every TRC-20 transfer still costs Energy. Without it, the network charges 6.2 TRX. With Energy delegation, that drops to 3-2 TRX. Korean users who withdraw from Upbit or Bithumb to a personal wallet and then send onward can cut that second fee in ~80%.

KOREAN USDT USER? THE REGULATIONS CHANGED. THE FEE SAVINGS DID NOT.

Rent Energy before every send. 2 TRX. 3 seconds. ~80% the network fee.

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Send 2 TRX for 65,000 energy in ~3 seconds. No sign-up. No wallet connect.

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Adapted from public industry sources. Original: TronNRG. Pricing and flow follow the ETONE bot in real time.

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