Tether launches public “USDT Directory” mapping global integrations
Tether says it has launched its first public map of the USDT ecosystem: a searchable directory that shows where and how USD₮ is being used across exchanges, wallets, payment providers, and other financial services worldwide. The company calls it the USD₮ Tether Directory, and positions it as a transparency layer for users, developers, institutions, and regulators trying to understand “real-world integrations” beyond marketing claims.
The directory was unveiled by CEO Paolo Ardoino at the 2026 Plan ₿ Forum in San Salvador, and built in collaboration with The Grid, which Tether describes as an “API-first ecosystem intelligence platform for Web3.”
At a time when USDT is already embedded in everything from trading to remittances, the point of the new site is less “here’s USDT” and more “here’s the plumbing.” Tether says entries can be browsed by category, supported assets, and product type, and it emphasizes that projects can submit or claim profiles—but those pages are reviewed by moderators to focus on active, verifiable usage, not purely promotional listings.
Tether also frames this as an early version, calling the directory a public proof-of-concept that will expand as more integrations go live. Businesses that support USDT are encouraged to claim their profiles to be included.
Why it matters for crypto
- Transparency is becoming infrastructure. A public map of verified integrations is a simple idea, but it helps users and institutions distinguish real distribution from hype.
- Regulators increasingly care about “where it’s used,” not just “how big it is.” Tether explicitly says the directory is meant to improve visibility for regulators and institutions tracking real-world rails.
- USDT’s ecosystem is bigger than exchanges. Tether highlights use across payments, remittances, trading, and liquidity—this directory is a way to show that breadth in one place.
- It’s also a builder tool. For wallets, fintechs, and developers, a directory can function like a distribution index—who supports what, and where integrations already exist.
What to watch next
- How strict the “verified usage” bar is. The value of the directory depends on moderation standards and how quickly stale listings get cleaned up.
- Coverage depth by region and category. Watch whether payments and remittance corridors get mapped as clearly as exchange listings.
- Institutional adoption of the directory as a due-diligence input. If funds and compliance teams start referencing it, it becomes more than a marketing page.
- Expansion beyond USD₮. Ardoino’s quote points to “USD₮ and other Tether products” being documented over time—watch whether the directory broadens scope.
Source: Tether News – “Tether Launches First Public Map of USD₮’s Ecosystem Worldwide”