Key Highlights
- Iran’s crypto ecosystem reached a record $7.78 billion in 2025, with Bitcoin surging 2,650% in local currency as the Rial collapsed.
- Crypto activity in Iran spikes during major events, like the Kerman bombings and conflicts with Israel, per Chainalysis.
- On-chain data from shows the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) now controls 50% of all Iranian crypto activity, using it for proxy funding and to bypass sanctions.
- During late 2025 protests, Iranians withdrew Bitcoin to personal wallets amid internet blackouts to protect their wealth.
As Iran’s economy buckles under hyperinflation and civil unrest, cryptocurrency has become a lifeline for citizens and a tool of power for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
According to data from a Chainalysis report, Iran’s crypto market swelled to $7.78 billion in 2025. With high inflation rates coupled with a failing economy, Iranians have had to turn to cryptocurrencies for the preservation of their money when the Rial is losing virtually all its value.
For the IRGC, however, it has become an essential, state-controlled tool for bypassing global sanctions and funding regional proxy conflicts.
Escaping the dying Rial
The economic backdrop to this boom is catastrophic. With the currency losing 96% of its value and the black market dollar rate at 1.5 million Rials, Iranians are turning to crypto to preserve savings, bypass banking limits, and cope with soaring prices. Amid the collapse of the Rial, Bitcoin also surged to over 105 billion Rials, up 2,650% in a month. In this environment, holding Rials for ordinary citizens is financial suicide.
And Chainalysis’ report shows that Iranian cryptocurrency activity tends to peak during such significant political or military events. For example, in January 2024, bombings occurred in Kerman due to a memorial service of former IRGC-Quds Force Commander Qasem Soleimani.
Later events have also had a similar effect. These have corresponded with a spike in crypto activity when missile strikes on Israel occurred in October 2024, and after its shadowy 12-day war in June 2025.
The hackers targeted major Iranian institutions, including the country’s largest crypto exchange, Nobitex, Bank Sepah, and even state TV to air footage of women’s protests, urging citizens to take to the streets.
IRGC’s dominance in crypto
The findings show that the IRGC is playing a bigger role in Iran’s crypto market. In the fourth quarter of 2025, addresses linked to the IRGC made up about 50% of all crypto activity.
IRGC-related transaction volume escalated from over $2 billion in 2024 to over $3 billion in 2025. And there may be even more wallets that have not gone public. This suggests that the regime has effectively captured the domestic crypto market.
The IRGC uses cryptocurrency to fund regional proxies, move illicit funds, and circumvent international sanctions. That represents the very close linkage of digital assets to the exercise of state power, both as a financial tool and as a strategic tool.
Bitcoin as a lifeline for citizens
As the IRGC amasses more power, the widespread protests that began late 2025 have triggered a flight to safety among Iranians. Data suggests that during the wave of public protests, there was a significant movement of funds from cryptocurrency exchanges to individual Bitcoin holders.
This was especially notable between December 28, 2025, and January 8, 2026. This period coincided with a total government-imposed internet blackout designed to crush dissent.
However, Bitcoin’s censorship-resistant design and self-custody features give citizens independence with their money in a system where banks may be heavily monitored or unreliable. It is the only asset capable of retaining value that the state cannot easily confiscate, provided that the user maintains proper self-custody security.
For Iranians, Bitcoin is more than a method of preserving wealth. It is also a means of resistance, reflecting a rational response to economic instability and political uncertainty.
The future of sanctions
The situation in Iran serves as a grim case study for the future of global finance. In the wake of war, economic turmoil, or governmental crackdowns, cryptocurrency becomes a lifeline-a secure store of value and source of financial independence. But it also shows that neutral technology can be weaponized by both sides of an asymmetric conflict.
The data suggests a troubling reality for global policymakers: current economic sanctions are becoming increasingly porous. If an organization as large as the IRGC can move $3 billion annually through digital rails, it means that traditional banking blockades are failing.
Iran has also created a blueprint for other sanctioned nations, like Russia or North Korea, demonstrating how to simultaneously tolerate a domestic crypto market to stave off total economic collapse, while co-opting that same market to fund the regime’s survival. In 2026, Bitcoin in Iran is no longer just currency; it is geopolitical ammunition.
Also Read: Iran’s IRGC Quietly Shifted $1B Through UK Crypto Platforms
