Iran Built a $7.78B Crypto Economy to Bypass Sanctions

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  • Chainalysis links transaction spikes to protests, sanctions, and the 2025 Iran–Israel war.

  • Citizens increased Bitcoin withdrawals during unrest as inflation hit 40–50% and the rial weakened.

  • Addresses tied to the IRGC and central bank moved billions in crypto, including over $507M in USDT.

Iran has quietly assembled a $7.78 billion digital asset economy to move money outside U.S. sanctions and the dollar system. According to blockchain data, activity surged through 2025 across Iran, involving citizens, state institutions, and security forces. The growth reflects how crypto became a financial channel during sanctions pressure, domestic unrest, and regional conflict.

Crypto Growth Tied to Sanctions and Conflict

According to Chainalysis, Iran’s digital asset activity accelerated sharply in 2025. The firm published its report on January 15. Notably, transaction spikes aligned with major events, including the Kerman bombings in January 2024 and missile strikes in October 2024.

Chainalysis also linked activity surges to the 12-day Iran–Israel war in June 2025. Iran has faced sanctions since 1979, with expanded restrictions between 2006 and 2010. In 2019 and 2020, U.S. sanctions extended into Iran’s banking and financial sectors.

Pressure increased again after U.S. President Donald Trump revived the “maximum pressure” campaign. Measures targeted oil exports and sanction enforcement. As inflation reached 40–50%, crypto usage grew as the rial lost value.

Citizens Turn to Bitcoin Amid Unrest

Chainalysis reported that Iranian citizens increased Bitcoin withdrawals during protests and blackouts. Demonstrations began on December 28, 2025, and spread across multiple cities. Reports indicate over 2,000 people were killed as protests were suppressed.

During this period, citizens moved BTC into personal wallets. Chainalysis described this as a response to currency collapse and political instability. The firm noted similar patterns in other regions facing conflict or economic stress.

Iran legalized Bitcoin mining in 2019 using subsidized electricity. Authorities later sold mined Bitcoin to the central bank to fund imports. Estimates suggest Iran controls between 2% and 5% of global Bitcoin hash power.

Security Forces and State Crypto Activity

Chainalysis found that addresses linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps received more than $3 billion in 2025. In Q4 alone, those wallets accounted for over half of Iran’s total crypto inflows.

The report also said Iran’s central bank accumulated more than $507 million in USDT. In January, The Washington Post reported that IRGC-linked networks moved about $1 billion through U.K.-registered exchanges since 2023.

These developments followed joint U.S. and Israeli military operations targeting Iran’s military capabilities. Trump said the actions aimed to stop missile threats and prevent nuclear weapon development.

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