How Iran Rebuilds Financial Channels Through Cryptocurrency After Forty Years of Sanctions

Jan 11, 2026 23:09:38

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Original Title: The Axis of Illicit Finance: Iran's Crypto Strategy Explained

Original Author: Jessica Davis, Insight

Original Translation: Peggy, BlockBeats

Editor's Note: Under more than forty years of intense sanctions pressure, Iran has gradually been squeezed out of the global financial network centered on the US dollar and traditional banking systems. This article outlines the evolution of Iran from oil embargoes and financial disconnections to the introduction of cryptocurrencies, presenting how sanctions have objectively driven a constrained country to build a parallel financial system.

In Iran, cryptocurrencies are no longer just a technological choice but have been incorporated into the national-level toolbox for evading sanctions and geopolitical maneuvering. As this system intertwines with a broader alternative financial network, its impact has transcended Iran itself, pointing to profound changes occurring in sanction mechanisms, the global financial order, and security dynamics.

The following is the original text:

This article marks the beginning of a series of eight articles aimed at examining how Iran increasingly relies on cryptocurrencies to evade international sanctions. These changes occur against a backdrop of high volatility: Iran's confrontation with Israel in 2025, the ongoing activities of its regional proxy networks, and a wave of protests triggered by corruption, economic hardship (exacerbated by sanctions), and political repression.

Understanding how and why Iran incorporates cryptocurrencies into its sanctions evasion strategy is crucial for assessing how it will respond to countermeasures in the future and what impact this will have on global security.

Iran's cryptocurrency activities are also part of a larger narrative. I refer to it as the "Axis of Illicit Finance": an emerging alternative financial system involving other sanctioned or adversarial countries to the West, such as Russia, Venezuela, and North Korea (DPRK), with China playing a key supporting role.

In the upcoming series of articles, I will gradually dismantle how this system operates, who benefits from it, and why it deserves more attention now than ever before.

Background of Sanctions on Iran

For a long time, Iran has adopted highly adaptive financial strategies to mitigate the impact of international sanctions while continuously supporting its regional proxy organizations. These methods include shadow shipping fleets, money service providers, shell company networks, and cash couriers. As sanctions increasingly constrict its access to the formal financial system, Iran and its affiliates have increasingly relied on cryptocurrencies to bypass regulations and funnel funds to the "Axis of Resistance," which includes Hezbollah, Hamas, Ansarallah, and militia groups in Iraq.

Although Iran's cryptocurrency-based financing infrastructure is still in development, its complexity and coverage are continuously increasing, gradually integrating traditional financial systems with emerging digital mechanisms. At the same time, this system is becoming more embedded in an alternative financial system shaped by Russia and North Korea (DPRK) and supported by China, with other countries (including Venezuela) also utilizing this system. Thus, cryptocurrencies are likely to play an increasingly important role in Iran's efforts to withstand sanctions and its ability to fund proxy forces throughout the region.

A Nation Shaped by One of the Harshest Sanction Regimes Globally

Since the 1979 revolution, Iran's economy has repeatedly suffered from the impact of international sanctions. These measures aim to restrict Iran's access to US dollars and its ability to enter US financial institutions, while also severing its ties with foreign banks that have correspondent relationships in the US, thereby weakening its capacity for trade and international transactions. At certain times, the economic impact of sanctions has compounded the shocks from global oil price fluctuations.

In other cases, sanctions from the US and the international community have prompted Iran to make concessions in negotiations aimed at limiting its nuclear capabilities and related developments. However, under the conditions of "maximum pressure," these sanctions have also stimulated the Iranian regime to intensify its efforts to evade sanctions—both to enhance its bargaining chips and to alleviate domestic economic pressures. In recent years, these evasion efforts have increasingly incorporated cryptocurrencies.

The timeline of sanctions on Iran shows that under decades of intense sanctions, Iran has gradually been "squeezed out" of the traditional financial system and has ultimately incorporated cryptocurrencies into its national-level toolbox for evading sanctions, financing, and geopolitical maneuvering. Specifically, since the 1979 Iranian Revolution and the hostage crisis, the US imposed the first round of sanctions on Iran, banning oil imports, freezing assets, and imposing trade and travel embargoes; from 1984 to 2005, sanctions were continuously tightened against the backdrop of multiple terrorism-related incidents; from 2006 to 2013, sanctions shifted focus to the financial sector to curb Iran's nuclear program, cutting Iran off from the SWIFT system. After the announcement of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, sanctions were partially lifted, but in 2018, the US withdrew from the agreement and reimposed all nuclear-related and secondary sanctions. In the same year, Iran's largest decentralized exchange, Nobitex, began operations, and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' Quds Force also began using cryptocurrencies to evade US sanctions. In 2019, the US designated the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as a foreign terrorist organization. By June 2025, war broke out between Israel and Iran, and Nobitex and Sepah Bank were hacked, showing that sanctions, the financial system, and cryptocurrency infrastructure have been deeply intertwined in geopolitical conflicts.

To fund its proxy forces and evade sanctions, Iran operates a parallel financial infrastructure composed of informal remittance agencies, bank accounts, and shell company networks, aimed at laundering proceeds from oil sales and creating "deniability" regarding the sources of oil. When conditions allow, this network intersects with the Western financial system, facilitating Iran's financial activities globally. For example, media reports indicate that two fintech companies, Paysera and Wise, have unknowingly processed payments for this network. Over the past eight years, Iran has also integrated cryptocurrency capabilities into this shadow banking system.

Iran's true cryptocurrency activities began in the mid-2010s when the country's first large cryptocurrency exchange, Nobitex, was established. As of 2023, Nobitex has become Iran's largest cryptocurrency exchange; additionally, Iran has four other larger exchanges: Wallex.ir, Excoino, Aban Tether, and Bit24.cash. Nobitex is deeply embedded in Iran's traditional payment ecosystem, supporting real-time fund deposits and account verification. It serves as a fully functional financial bridge, allowing users to bypass the international banking system, demonstrating "how to integrate cryptocurrency channels with local banking infrastructure within a sanctioned jurisdiction to build a resilient, borderless payment system."

Iranian citizens (sometimes even including members of the regime) utilize cryptocurrencies to transfer capital abroad during geopolitical crises. Even if not for the purpose of wealth transfer, many Iranians invest in cryptocurrencies to hedge against the volatility risks of their local currency and the overall economy.

The widespread adoption of cryptocurrencies in Iran is not surprising: sanctions often drive adoption, especially in regions with high income inequality. In fact, cryptocurrency adoption is influenced by factors such as economic instability and infrastructure availability, and the adoption rate is typically higher in countries with limited access to traditional financial systems.

Since 2018, Iran has begun using cryptocurrencies to evade US sanctions. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) is one of the key users, utilizing cryptocurrencies to fund intelligence activities and its proxy networks throughout the Middle East, while also supporting external intervention actions such as sabotage, property destruction, and possibly even targeted assassinations.

At the national level, regime officials, and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) are using cryptocurrencies to evade sanctions and enter international markets. According to a blockchain analytics company, Nobitex and other Iranian exchanges have adopted "advanced technologies" to transfer funds and deliberately obscure the sources and destinations of funds. For example, Iran uses cryptocurrency transactions to pay for imported goods that cannot be processed through traditional payment systems, compensating for financial revenue losses caused by sanctions. Additionally, Iran specifically uses cryptocurrencies to legitimize import payments, circumventing sanctions and avoiding the use of US dollars.

In addition to directly using cryptocurrencies for transactions, Iran also utilizes its surplus oil and energy resources to power Bitcoin mining, essentially converting energy into crypto assets. Given Iran's extensive use of cryptocurrencies and its connections to international markets through multiple blockchains, this method creates liquidity for Iran—usable for purchasing goods and services as well as funneling funds to its proxy forces within the "Axis of Resistance." In fact, it is widely believed that the IRGC has engaged in large-scale Bitcoin mining activities.

Once cryptocurrencies are acquired, Iran uses these funds to finance other illicit activities. This includes providing financial support to organizations within the "Axis of Resistance" that serve Iran's regional hegemonic goals, and possibly using virtual assets to fund overseas influence operations. To date, cryptocurrency transactions from the IRGC's Quds Force (QF) have flowed to Hezbollah, Hamas, and Ansarallah as part of its overall financing strategy. Cryptocurrency transactions may also benefit other organizations within the "Axis of Resistance."

Iran's turn to cryptocurrencies marks the latest phase in its long-standing efforts to combat and evade one of the most comprehensive sanction regimes globally. Initially, this was merely a stopgap measure to maintain economic resilience; today, it has become a key tool supporting Iran's broader diplomatic policy objectives, particularly in sustaining its proxy networks across the Middle East. As Iran's cryptocurrency financing infrastructure matures and increasingly intertwines with an emerging alternative financial system involving Russia, Venezuela, North Korea, and China, its impact has far exceeded the borders of Tehran. Subsequent articles in this series will further explore how Iran's proxy forces utilize these financial innovations, the specific methods employed for transferring and concealing funds, and the expanding roles of China and Russia in supporting and promoting Iran's alternative financial architecture.

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