As Iran’s economy reels from deepening unrest and a collapsing currency, cryptocurrency activity tied to the country surged to nearly $7.8 billion in 2025, according to a new report from blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis.
According to Chainalysis, the data shows digital assets increasingly serving two distinct roles—as a financial escape valve for civilians during periods of instability and a growing channel for state-linked actors operating under sanctions.
“For Iranian citizens living under a government struggling to maintain economic stability amid inflation rates of 40-50%,” Chainalysis wrote, “cryptocurrency represents not just a sanctions workaround but a way to opt out of a failing system controlled by an increasingly desperate regime.”
Chainalysis said the $7.78 billion figure marks a sharp increase from 2024. As protests in Iran intensified in late December and authorities imposed nationwide internet restrictions, withdrawals from cryptocurrency exchanges to personal wallets jumped as access to state-controlled financial channels became less reliable.
Bradley Rettler, a senior fellow at the Bitcoin Policy Institute, said the shift toward self-custody during Iran’s protests reflects Bitcoin’s appeal in environments marked by financial repression and currency instability.
“In countries where citizens fear their government, worry about financial censorship, or see their local currency inflating, Bitcoin provides an alternative,” Rettler told Decrypt. “When any of those things increase, we should expect Bitcoin ownership to increase. And the only way to ensure you can keep access to your Bitcoin and use it privately is to withdraw it to a personal wallet. This seems to be what is happening in Iran.”
Since its creation in 2009, Bitcoin has been used by activists and dissidents as an alternative payment rail, gaining wider visibility in 2011 when WikiLeaks began accepting Bitcoin donations after facing a financial blockade from PayPal.
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Research published in the International Review of Economics & Finance also found that during crises such as COVID-19 and the wars in Ukraine and Palestine, Bitcoin usage tends to increase as access to banks and payment networks is disrupted.
While the report highlighted increased Bitcoin use among protesters, it also documented a rise in state-linked crypto activity. Addresses associated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps accounted for more than 50% of all crypto value received in the country during the final quarter of 2025, according to Chainalysis’ analysis of sanctioned wallets.