Is Tether (USDT) Halal? The Screen Before You Buy
Screen Tether (USDT) before you trade. Check riba, gharar, maysir, custody, spot-only execution, and AAOIFI-aligned proof before risking capital.
Before you buy Tether (USDT), answer one thing first: what are you actually holding, how does it earn, and does any riba, gharar, maysir, or haram business exposure sit underneath? This guide gives you the screen before the verdict, so you can decide with evidence instead of forum noise.
USDT and USDC raise the same core Shariah question — what backs the parity guarantee — but with different reserve compositions and different transparency profiles. This article focuses on USDT specifically.
USDT in one paragraph
Tether (USDT) is the largest stablecoin by circulating supply and the dominant trading-quote currency on most centralised crypto exchanges. Issued by Tether Limited, USDT is intended to be redeemable 1:1 for U.S. dollars. Tether publishes quarterly attestations of reserves; reserve composition has historically included a mix of cash, U.S. Treasury bills, secured loans, commercial paper (now reduced), and a small allocation to digital assets and precious metals.
The Shariah questions USDT raises
1. Is USDT itself a riba-bearing instrument for the holder?
No. Holding USDT in a wallet does not generate yield by default. The strict transactional layer is therefore neutral.
2. Is the reserve-backed structure permissible?
This is the same question USDC raises. T-bill exposure constitutes interest-bearing backing; commercial paper exposure constitutes corporate debt instruments. The two scholarly positions are the same:
- Holder-position view. The holder's contract is with the issuer; the issuer's funding choices are the issuer's responsibility.
- Backing-composition view. Tokens with interest-bearing backing cannot be cleanly held even without direct yield receipt.
3. Does Tether's history affect the analysis?
Tether's reserve disclosures and audit history have attracted regulatory scrutiny. The 2021 settlement with the New York Attorney General and the 2021 CFTC settlement are matters of public record. From a Shariah perspective, these are not a theological judgement on the token — they are operational facts that inform whether the disclosure on which a permissibility analysis rests is reliable.
The fiqh principle most relevant here is that obligations rest on what is known and disclosed. A token whose backing composition is fully transparent and reliably attested permits a cleaner analysis than one with inconsistent disclosure. This argues for active monitoring rather than blanket prohibition.
How HalalCrypto applies its methodology to USDT
Under the 3-layer screen:
- Business Activity Exclusion. Tether Limited's primary income is reserve interest and lending — riba-bearing. The token is used by HalalCrypto only as a transactional quote. Customers do not earn yield on USDT balances on the platform.
- Financial Ratio Screening. Reserve composition is reviewed at every published attestation cycle. Material changes (e.g., a shift away from interest-bearing reserves, or further reductions in commercial paper) update the disclosure.
- Trade Execution Compliance. USDT trading is spot-only, T+0 settled, on supported exchanges.
Customers who prefer to minimise USDT exposure can:
- Use USDC-quoted pairs where their exchange supports them.
- Use direct fiat on/off ramps where available.
- Route through the smallest viable USDT dwell time.
What recognised authorities have said
- AAOIFI SS-59 addresses reserve-backed tokens generally; the criteria apply to USDT.
- MUI Indonesia has addressed stablecoins as a class; no USDT-specific verdict.
- SAC Malaysia has addressed digital assets generally; no USDT-specific verdict.
- Mufti Taqi Usmani has expressed concern about reserve-asset stablecoins backed by interest-bearing instruments.
Practical guidance
Do not buy Tether (USDT) because a headline says halal or haram. Run the screen, read the cited reasoning, avoid leverage, and size any position as risk capital. For a faster next step, compare the coin in the halal screener and keep the methodology open while you decide.
Bottom line
USDT and USDC raise the same fundamental Shariah question — reserve composition. USDT's specific reserve mix and disclosure history mean a slightly different operational profile, but the fiqh question is structurally the same. HalalCrypto treats USDT as a transactional quote only, reviews the reserve composition at every quarterly screen, and discloses the result. Investors who want to minimise stablecoin exposure entirely can structure their access accordingly.
Frequently asked
- Are USDT and USDC the same Shariah question?
- Largely yes — both raise the reserve-composition question. USDT's reserve attestations are slightly different from USDC's, with disclosed allocations to commercial paper and digital assets in addition to T-bills. The fiqh question is structurally the same.
- Why has USDT been more scrutinised than USDC?
- Tether's reserve disclosures and audit history have been the subject of greater public scrutiny. From a Shariah perspective, transparency of disclosure is a relevant factor — clearer disclosure makes the holder's analysis cleaner. This is an operational consideration, not a theological one.
- Does HalalCrypto include USDT?
- USDT is supported only as a trading quote currency, not a yield-bearing position. Reserve composition is reviewed at every quarterly screen. Customers can avoid USDT by using direct fiat ramps or USDC-quoted pairs where their exchange supports them.