US Treasury Cracks Down On Crypto Ties To Iran: 4 Exchanges Receive New Sanctions
Alex Smith
1 hour ago
The US Treasury has announced a new round of Iran-related sanctions targeting crypto channels used to move value across borders, with Treasury officials arguing that Iran has turned to digital asset tools to bypass restrictions and maintain access to international funds.
New Iran Sanctions On Crypto Exchanges
The Treasuryâs Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) said Tuesday it designated Nobitex, described as Iranâs largest digital asset exchange, along with three other Iranian exchanges, as part of an initiative branded âEconomic Fury.â
 The Treasury positioned the designations as part of the Trump administrationâs broader effort to reduce what officials call the threat posed by the Iranian regime.
According to the OFAC release, Nobitex provided substantial assistance to the regime by processing more than half of all Iranian digital asset inflows in 2025.Â
Treasury officials also said the platform facilitated payments tied to Iranâs terrorist activities, sanctions evasion efforts, and transactions linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).Â
In addition, Treasury claims Nobitex helped the Central Bank of Iran access âhundreds of millions of dollarsâ in stablecoins, which were used to support the plummeting value of the Iranian rial.Â
The exchange, the release adds, also enabled regime insiders to reach international digital asset exchanges and evade sanctions across multiple jurisdictions.
Binance Pushes Back
In remarks tied to the announcement, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Iranâs economy is âin free fall,â but that the regime has nevertheless sought to âco-opt digital asset technologiesâ for what he described as a corrupt agendaâspecifically to evade US sanctions.Â
Bessent concluded his comments by saying that the Treasury intends to keep âfollowing the moneyâ to stop the regime from developing a nuclear weapon. He said this approach would extend beyond the traditional banking system and reach âthrough digital assetsâ as well.Â
While the OFAC designations focused on Iranian exchanges, scrutiny has been spreading beyond Iranâs borders. Bitcoinist previously reported that attention has also rippled to Binance, the worldâs largest cryptocurrency exchange.Â
In a February 24 letter to Binance co-CEO Richard Teng, Senator Richard Blumenthal cited reports suggesting the company enabled âlarge-scale violationsâ of US and international sanctions involving Iran.
Blumenthal wrote that Binance appeared to have ignored warnings and recommendations intended to prevent Iranian money-laundering schemes. He alleged that the crypto exchange allowed approximately $1.7 billion in transfers connected to Iran.Â
Binance, for its part, rejected the allegations ahead of the senatorâs inquiry. In a statement dated February 22, the company said it conducted an internal review and found âno evidence of violations of applicable sanctions laws.âÂ
Featured image created with OpenArt; chart from TradingView.comÂ
Related Articles
Why Are XRP ETF Inflows Growing While Bitcoin And Ethereum Are Bleeding?
On-chain data shows that XRP exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have continued to attr...
Bitcoinâs On-Chain Landscape Looks Far Different From Its 2021 Bull Market Peak
Given the prolonged waning price action, the Bitcoin network is starting to feel...
BNB Chain Ecosystem Sees Major Institutional Week With US ETF Debut, Asset Manager Bet
As financial institutions continue to bet on the crypto industry, the BNB Chain...
Polymarket Users Cry Foul After $85 Million Bet On MicroStrategyâs Bitcoin Sale Goes Wrong
A dispute with more than $85 million in total trading volume at stake has erupte...