Binance Australia is introducing new identification requirements for all crypto deposits and withdrawals from July 1, 2026, in line with Australia’s mandatory Travel Rule obligations, one of the country’s most significant moves to bring digital asset transfers under anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing supervision.
Starting July 1, Australian users receiving cryptocurrency into their Binance accounts will be required to provide details about the sender. Likewise, users withdrawing crypto from Binance to an external wallet or another exchange will need to supply information about the recipient. The requirement applies to all crypto transfer transactions regardless of the amount involved.
What information is required
For withdrawals to another exchange or self-hosted wallet, users will need to provide the recipient’s full name, country of residence, and town or locality. If a user is sending assets to themselves on another platform, the name of the receiving exchange may be sufficient.
Binance has said it will introduce these steps through pop-up prompts that appear during the transfer process. Users who fail to provide the required information risk having their transfers delayed, rejected, or blocked entirely.
Users who do not plan to move crypto in or out of their Binance accounts are not immediately affected. However, active users have been advised to ensure they have the full names and location details of regular transaction partners ready ahead of the July 1 deadline. A fresh login will also be required on or after that date to acknowledge the updated procedures.
The AUSTRAC framework behind it
The changes are driven by the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC), Australia’s financial intelligence agency. Under AUSTRAC’s Travel Rule framework, virtual asset service providers (VASPs) are required to collect and pass on sender and recipient information across the transfer chain, in line with global standards set by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF).
Australia’s transitional rules gave virtual asset service providers until July 1, 2026, to implement these Travel Rule obligations. Binance Australia’s announcement is consistent with that industry-wide deadline, and other VASPs operating in Australia are expected to introduce similar requirements around the same time.
The rules are designed to make originator and beneficiary information traceable across the value-transfer chain, helping regulated firms monitor for money laundering, terrorism financing, and other illicit activity.
Part of a broader compliance posture
The rollout comes as Binance navigates significant regulatory scrutiny globally. The exchange has faced a series of allegations around sanctions compliance in other jurisdictions, making its proactive approach to Australian regulatory obligations, and its stated commitment to local rule adherence, particularly notable in context.
Binance confirmed the changes are necessary to maintain its ability to continue operating services in Australia, where it reinstated AUD deposits and withdrawals via PayID and bank transfer only in January 2026 after a nearly three-year pause.
