Stablecoins
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Stablecoins
USDT vs USDC: Which Stablecoin Is Better for Nigerians in 2026?
Contents
01
What are USDT and USDC?
02
USDT vs USDC: Side-by-side comparison
03
Which is more available in Nigeria?
04
Which is safer?
05
What about CBN restrictions?
06
Which stablecoin should Nigerians use in 2026?
07
Frequently asked questions
08
The bottom line

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01
What are USDT and USDC?
USDT (Tether) is the world's largest stablecoin by trading volume. It was created in 2014 and is backed by a reserve of assets including cash, treasury bonds, and other instruments.
USDC (USD Coin) was launched in 2018 by Circle and Coinbase. It is backed exclusively by cash and short-term US government bonds, and is considered one of the most transparent stablecoins available.
Both are always worth $1. The question is which one works better for your situation in Nigeria.
02
USDT vs USDC: Side-by-side comparison
USDT | USDC | |
|---|---|---|
Pegged to | US Dollar | US Dollar |
Issuer | Tether | Circle |
Launched | 2014 | 2018 |
Market cap | ~$110 billion | ~$43 billion |
Liquidity in Nigeria | Very high | Medium |
Available on Freedx | Yes | Yes |
Transparency | Moderate | High |
Best for | Trading, remittances, daily use | Savings, business payments |
03
Which is more available in Nigeria?

USDT wins here, and it is not close.
USDT is the dominant stablecoin across Nigerian crypto exchanges, P2P platforms, and informal markets. If you are in Lagos, Abuja, or Port Harcourt and you ask someone to send you stablecoins, they will almost certainly send USDT.
USDC is growing but still less liquid in the Nigerian market. You may find fewer trading pairs and fewer counterparties willing to trade it directly.
For everyday Nigerians, USDT is simply easier to use right now, but is worth keeping an eye on USDC’s growth.
04
Which is safer?
This is where USDC has an edge.
Circle, the issuer of USDC, publishes monthly attestations from independent accounting firms confirming that every USDC in circulation is backed 1:1 by cash and US Treasury securities. Its reserves are highly transparent, giving users an extra level of confidence.
Tether, the issuer of USDT, has significantly improved its transparency over the years but has historically faced questions about the composition of its reserves. Even so, it remains the most battle-tested stablecoin, having survived multiple crypto market crashes while maintaining its $1 peg.
Tether (USDT) has improved its transparency significantly over the years but has historically faced questions about the exact composition of its reserves. However, tt remains the most battle-tested stablecoin in the market, having survived multiple crypto crashes without losing its $1 peg.
For savings you do not plan to move frequently, USDC offers more peace of mind. For active trading and transfers, USDT's track record speaks for itself.
05
What about CBN restrictions?

Nigeria's relationship with crypto has changed significantly over the past few years. In 2021, the CBN (The Central Bank of Nigeria) instructed banks to stop facilitating crypto transactions, pushing most activity onto P2P platforms, however, crypto was never made illegal and adoption kept growing despite the regulatory pushback.
Since then, the landscape has shifted. The banking restrictions were formally reversed in December 2023, The CBN introduced guidelines allowing banks to work with licensed crypto businesses, and Nigeria's SEC now regulates digital asset companies under the Investment and Securities Act 2025. In 2026, buying USDT or USDC in Nigeria is more straightforward than it has been in years.
What this means practically:
Buying through a regulated international exchange like Freedx sits outside the direct reach of CBN banking restrictions, since the transaction does not go through a Nigerian bank
USDT and USDC are treated the same under Nigerian regulations. Neither has special status over the other
The SEC's VASP framework is still maturing. Regulations may continue to evolve through 2026, so staying informed is worth the effort
06
Which stablecoin should Nigerians use in 2026?
Here is the honest answer: use USDT for most things, and USDC if transparency matters to you.
Use case | Best choice |
|---|---|
Sending remittances abroad | USDT |
Receiving payments from international clients | Either (ask the sender) |
Protecting savings from Naira devaluation | USDC (more transparent) |
Trading crypto on exchanges | USDT (more liquid) |
Paying for services online | USDT |
Business payments | USDC |
07
Frequently asked questions
Can I convert USDT to Naira on Freedx?
Yes. You can sell your USDT on Freedx and withdraw the equivalent value. Check current rates on the platform.
Is USDT or USDC better for receiving freelance payments from abroad?
Either works. USDT is more commonly used by clients in crypto-native industries. USDC is preferred by some US-based companies due to its regulatory transparency. Ask your client which they use.
Will the CBN block my Freedx account?
Freedx is an international exchange operating outside Nigerian banking infrastructure. Your activity on Freedx is separate from your local bank account.
Which stablecoin holds its $1 peg better?
Both have maintained their peg extremely well over time. USDC has never broken its peg. USDT briefly dipped during the 2022 crypto crisis but recovered within hours.
08
The bottom line
If you are a Nigerian looking to protect your savings from Naira devaluation, send remittances abroad, or get paid in dollars, both USDT and USDC will do the job. USDT is more liquid in Nigeria today. USDC is more transparent. Most Nigerians use USDT and have no reason to switch.
The most important step is not which stablecoin you pick. It is getting started.
Buy your first USDT on Freedx in 2 minutes at https://freedx.am



