Crypto Travel Rule: What It Means for Your Privacy

June 15, 2026
🏷️ travel-rule ⚖️ regulation 🕵️ privacy 🏷️ compliance

Question from BitcoinTalk: “What is the Travel Rule and will it affect my transfers?”

Short answer: The Travel Rule requires crypto exchanges to share sender and receiver information for transactions above a threshold (€1,000 in the EU, $3,000 in the US). Your exchange will ask for the receiver’s name and possibly their exchange. This applies to exchange-to-exchange transfers, not self-custody wallets.

What the Travel Rule Requires

When you send crypto from one exchange to another:

If you’re sending to your own self-custody wallet:

Thresholds by Region

RegionThresholdApplies To
EU€1,000All transfers exceeding this
US$3,000All transfers exceeding this
UK£1,000All transfers exceeding this
SingaporeS$1,500All transfers exceeding this
Japan¥100,000All transfers

Why It Exists

The Travel Rule comes from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) — an international body that sets anti-money laundering standards. It’s designed to prevent:

Impact on Privacy

AspectBefore Travel RuleAfter Travel Rule
Send $5K to friend on another exchangeAnonymous to the destination exchangeExchange asks for friend’s details
Withdraw to your own walletJust your wallet addressMay ask to confirm wallet ownership
Large transfersNo additional infoFull KYC-level data shared
Self-custody to exchangeYou were anonymousExchange may ask source of funds

How to Protect Privacy

  1. Use self-custody wallets — Transfers between your wallet and an exchange don’t trigger shared info (just wallet ownership confirmation)
  2. Keep transfers under threshold — Small transfers aren’t affected (but this is impractical for large holders)
  3. Use privacy coins — Monero and others are designed for transaction privacy
  4. Use DEXs — No KYC, no travel rule

Verdict

The Travel Rule affects exchange-to-exchange transfers above a certain threshold. Most individual users are affected when sending large amounts from one exchange to another. The practical workaround: consolidate on one exchange or use self-custody wallets in between.

Related: What Is KYC? | How to Stay Anonymous in Crypto | Where Is Crypto Banned?

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This content is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before investing.