Australian crypto users face tighter transfer checks as the country’s crypto Travel Rule takes full effect on July 1. Exchanges must now verify and record sender and recipient details for every virtual asset transfer.
The change has prompted some Bitcoin (BTC) holders to move coins off exchanges early. Reports of withdrawal delays and fresh verification steps have spread through Australian crypto communities ahead of the deadline.
What the Travel Rule Changes
From July 1, the financial intelligence agency AUSTRAC requires virtual asset service providers to collect and pass on originator and beneficiary information for every transfer.
The data includes the payer’s details, the payee’s full name, and tracing information such as wallet addresses or transaction references.
There is no minimum threshold, so even the smallest transfers are subject to the new crypto Travel Rule obligations.
Australia is adopting a standard that the global watchdog FATF extended to crypto back in June 2019, and one that the European Union began enforcing on December 30, 2024.
Some obligations already began on March 31, when exchange and fiat services came under the reformed regime.
The rollout follows years of tighter oversight, including the recent AUSTRAC crypto ATM crackdown and pending crypto exchange licensing rules.
Why Australian Exchanges are Tightening Withdrawals
Binance Australia will require sender information for all incoming deposits and beneficiary details for withdrawals, including full name, country, and city.
Transfers to a user’s own account on another exchange need only the receiving platform’s name.
The exchange warned that transfers may be delayed or returned if the required information is missing.
Reporting on unverified self-hosted wallet transfers stays deferred until 2029, easing one concern for self-custody users.
Bitcoin’s recent price action sits near $64,615, roughly 49% below its record of $126,080 set on October 6, 2025.
Self-Custody Push Meets Skepticism
Mo, who advises clients at The Bitcoin Way, said demand to exit exchanges is rising ahead of the deadline.
Aussies are now experiencing difficulties with transferring Bitcoin out from exchanges in Australia and on July 1st they are making it harder… Every Australian client on our end is rushing to get their bitcoin off exchanges before that date… Everyone trying to leave at once through a door that just got smaller,” he wrote in a post.
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Not everyone agrees that the situation is chaotic. Australian educator Dale Warburton disputed claims of widespread disruption while still calling the measure poor policy.
The exchange of views has renewed interest in moving to self-custody.
The early movers proving prescient may depend on how exchanges handle volume once the rules harden on July 1.
With Bitcoin still below its peak, the new system has yet to face a real stress test.
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