Tether’s Korean Trademark Portfolio Now Stands at 15
According to a May 19 report by Tokenpost, Tether filed 7 additional trademark applications with the Korean Intellectual Property Office (KIPO) on May 14, covering the company name, logo, and identifiers related to its gold-backed stablecoin Tether Gold (XAUt). Combined with 8 earlier applications submitted across five batches last year, Tether’s cumulative trademark filings in South Korea now total 15. The applicants are Tether Operations and its El Salvador-based parent entity SA de C.V. The newly filed classifications go beyond brand defense and extend into the broader category of “stablecoin business” — a standard pre-positioning step issuers typically take before pursuing substantive operations in a given jurisdiction.
Editorial Take: Practical Implications for USDT Virtual Card Users
The bottom line upfront: in the short term (7–30 days), USDT card services for Korean users will not change as a result of this news. Trademark filings are a pre-positioning move at the intellectual property level. There are at least two to three regulatory milestones still to clear before any real fiat on-ramp, local banking partnership, VAN (Value Added Network) integration, or card network settlement arrangement can be established.
That said, several concrete scenarios are worth watching over the medium to long term (90+ days):
- Korean-identity users spending in Japan and Korea via MPCard: MPCard operates on an Asia-Pacific routing path with an Asia-Pacific BIN, making it a viable option for Korean users working around local channel restrictions today. If Tether genuinely establishes a Korean issuance or redemption channel, a “KRW ↔ USDT direct conversion” option may emerge, reducing friction at the on-ramp stage. This would not diminish MPCard’s value — cross-border spending and cross-currency settlement remain the core use case for Asia-Pacific BIN cards.
- Bybit / Bitget Korean KYC users: Our Bybit Card review and Bitget Wallet Card review both show Korean-identity support as “functional but with friction.” If Tether’s localization loosens Korean won channels at exchanges, the path from KRW deposit → USDT balance → card spending would become smoother. This is conditional on approval from the Financial Services Commission (FSC).
- XAUt holders: This latest round of trademark filings includes Tether Gold. Securing trademark rights for XAUt in South Korea would signal that Tether is preparing for local distribution of that asset — something with no precedent in the Asia-Pacific region to date.
Historical Parallels: Circle in Japan vs. Tether in El Salvador
Placed on the Asia-Pacific stablecoin localization timeline, this move can be compared against two prior examples.
The first is Circle’s entry into Japan in 2024 — a joint venture with SBI Holdings, structured under Japan’s Fund Settlement Act stablecoin provisions. Circle in Japan took a heavier path: license first, local custodian bank second, trademark as an afterthought. Tether’s approach in South Korea is different: plant the trademark stakes first, then assess the licensing trajectory. This ordering suggests Tether is still evaluating the Phase 2 rulemaking under South Korea’s Virtual Asset User Protection Act (VAUPA) before committing fully.
The second is Tether’s 2021 establishment of SA de C.V. in El Salvador. The co-applicant on the current Korean filings is that same El Salvador entity. Tether’s consistent playbook over recent years has been to use a crypto-friendly jurisdiction as its registered parent and extend trademark and entity presence toward target markets from there. This contrasts sharply with Circle’s and Paxos’s approach of obtaining licenses directly in target markets. The result is that Tether typically enters new markets faster but with somewhat shallower compliance depth.
Regulatory and Compliance Boundaries: What South Korea Currently Allows for USDT Cards
South Korea currently explicitly permits holding and transferring USDT (VAUPA Phase 1 is in effect), and domestic exchanges are permitted to list USDT trading pairs (Upbit and Bithumb both carry USDT pairs). However, direct marketing of foreign-issued stablecoin card products to Korean residents currently sits in a grey zone — issuers typically do not run active acquisition campaigns on .kr domains, and Korean users access these services by independently seeking out foreign providers.
We do not currently maintain a dedicated South Korea compliance page. For a comparable jurisdiction, see our Japan Compliance Guide (the Asia-Pacific stablecoin legislative pace is similar). In brief: a trademark filing does not constitute “marketing,” so Tether’s current move does not cross any regulatory line. However, if Tether subsequently establishes a local entity in South Korea and pursues B2C promotion, it will need to directly address VAUPA Phase 2 requirements for stablecoin issuers, including capital adequacy, reserve disclosure, and local representative appointment.
Key Milestones to Watch
- KIPO examination outcome: Trademark applications in South Korea typically take 8–14 months from filing to approval. If examiners narrow the classification scope or issue a rejection for review, that would signal regulatory resistance.
- Whether Tether establishes a Korean legal entity: The current applicants are Tether Operations and the El Salvador parent. The appearance of a “Tether Korea” local entity would be the real market-entry signal.
- FSC VAUPA Phase 2 rulemaking: Expected within 2026, this will define the specific compliance framework for stablecoin issuance and circulation in South Korea.
- XAUt listings on Korean exchanges: Gold-backed stablecoins currently have zero exchange support in South Korea. If a listing appears within six months of trademark approval, it would confirm that Tether is following a “trademark → listing → card product” full-path strategy.
Editorial Recommendations
- Current MPCard holders in South Korea: No action needed. The core value of an Asia-Pacific routing card will not diminish because of Tether’s localization move — if anything, improved on-ramp channels could make the overall experience smoother. See our Japan-Korea cross-border spending scenarios.
- Users evaluating Korean USDT card options: Start with our Asia-Pacific USDT Card Rankings and compare MPCard, Bybit Card, and Bitget Wallet Card side by side. Do not wait for Tether’s localization — it will likely take at least 6–12 months before any end-user-facing product becomes available.
- XAUt holders: Keep an eye on Korean exchange listing activity, but do not rebalance positions based on this trademark news alone — trademark ≠ listing ≠ liquidity.
- What not to do: Do not trust any channel claiming “Tether Korea official partnership” or “Tether Korea pre-launch airdrop.” Tether currently has no local entity in South Korea. Any such promotion is a scam.