Skip to main content

    How to Buy Tether in Canada (2026 Guide)

    What to know before buying Tether

    USDT is the most-listed crypto asset on earth, and the problem is almost never finding a venue. US-regulated books are narrower than people assume: Kraken lists USDT, Bitstamp lists it, and Crypto.com lists it, but Coinbase delisted USDT in most of its US markets years ago and Gemini has never offered the pair for US retail. Offshore — Binance, Bybit, OKX, Bitget, KuCoin, HTX — USDT is the default quote currency for everything.

    The fact that trips people up is that "USDT" is not one asset. Tether mints the same ticker on Ethereum as ERC-20, on Tron as TRC-20, on Solana as SPL, on BNB Chain as BEP-20, and separately on Polygon, Avalanche, Arbitrum, Optimism, Near, and Ton. These are not interchangeable on-chain. Sending USDT-ERC20 to a TRON address is not a slow transfer; it is a loss. The receiving chain does not host that contract, the funds hit a wallet that cannot recognize them, and neither exchange support nor Tether can claw them back. Every withdrawal interface asks which network — read it twice.

    Fees illustrate why TRC-20 dominates remittances. A USDT-ERC20 transfer on Ethereum mainnet can cost a few dollars in gas during congestion; the same transfer as TRC-20 on Tron costs roughly a cent or is free under Tron's energy model, and SPL on Solana clears for a fraction of a cent. For moving money internationally this gap is the entire product.

    Before buying, confirm the exchange lets you withdraw on the specific chain your receiving wallet supports, check that Tether's latest attestation report is recent on tether.to/en/transparency, and assume reserve composition is a live question rather than a settled one — the company paid CFTC and NYAG settlements over past disclosures.

    Written by coinvela staff

    Coinvela is a global cryptocurrency search engine and crypto price comparison platform. We display rates, fees, and features from third-party exchanges for informational purposes only. We do not provide investment, trading, or financial advice, and we do not facilitate transactions. All data is provided "as is." Coinvela makes no representations or warranties regarding accuracy, timeliness, or completeness and accepts no liability for errors, delays, outages, or actions taken in reliance on this information. Prices and quotes can change moment-to-moment due to market volatility and may differ at checkout. Coinvela may earn affiliate commissions from some partners; this never affects rankings or content and adds no cost to you. All purchases occur on third-party platforms that are independently regulated; always confirm details on the exchange before buying or selling. See our Methodology for how we calculate and display rates.

    Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and involve a significant risk of loss. Do your own research and consider consulting a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

    © 2026 coinvela. All rights reserved.