Tether vs Ethereum
Compare any two cryptocurrencies side by side
USDT | Rank #3
| Metric | USDT | ETH |
|---|---|---|
| Rank | #3 | #2 |
| Price | $1.0000 | $2328.40 |
| Market Cap | $184.03B | $281.04B |
| 24h % | -0.02% | +10.30% |
| 7d % | -0.01% | +15.44% |
| Volume (24h) | $104.62B | $39.29B |
| Category | Stablecoin | Layer 1 |
| Blockchain | Ethereum | Ethereum |
Tether
About
Tether is a stablecoin designed to maintain a value pegged to the US dollar and is widely used in crypto markets to provide liquidity, reduce volatility and facilitate fast transfers across exchanges and platforms.
How It Works
A centralized stablecoin pegged to the US Dollar. It works by maintaining a reserve of traditional currency and cash equivalents (like treasury bills) to back every token issued 1:1, allowing traders to move in and out of volatile assets quickly.
Use Cases
Price Stability & Trading: Used as a digital US Dollar to park funds during market volatility, settle cross-border payments, and serve as the primary liquidity pair on almost every crypto exchange.
Tokenomics
Fiat-Backed Liquidity: A centralized stablecoin where each token is backed 1:1 by physical reserves of USD and treasuries. It is used as a "safe haven" during market volatility, a primary trading pair on exchanges, and for high-speed cross-border settlements.
Risks & Considerations
Centralized control allows address blacklisting; lack of a "Big Four" audit remains a transparency hurdle in 2026.
Ethereum
About
Ethereum is a decentralized blockchain platform launched in 2015 that enables smart contracts and decentralized applications without intermediaries, supporting DeFi, NFTs, DAOs and Web3 ecosystems through its proof-of-stake network and large developer community.
How It Works
A global programmable blockchain for smart contracts using Proof of Stake (PoS). It allows developers to build decentralized applications (dApps) and financial systems. Validators stake their own currency to verify transactions instead of using energy-intensive mining.
Use Cases
Decentralized Computing: Used as "gas" to pay for the execution of smart contracts, hosting decentralized applications (dApps), and minting/trading NFTs on the world's most active developer network.
Tokenomics
Deflationary Infrastructure: Used to pay for "gas" to execute smart contracts. Its tokenomics include a burn mechanism (EIP-1559) that destroys a portion of fees, potentially making it deflationary. It is the primary collateral for DeFi and the base currency for the NFT market.
Risks & Considerations
Structural shift toward Layer-2s may dilute base-layer fee burn; institutional ETF demand creates heavy macro-dependency.
