Iran’s stablecoin system shows resilience under fire
The Central Bank of Iran temporarily halted the USDT–toman trading pair during February airstrikes in a bid to slow currency repricing, underscoring how systemically important stablecoins have become within the country’s financial system.
Despite a reported 99% drop in internet connectivity and an 80% collapse in crypto transaction volumes following US-Israeli strikes, Iran’s crypto infrastructure showed what TRM Labs described as “evidence of stress, not failure.”
Before the conflict escalated, Iran’s crypto transaction volumes were estimated at $8–10 billion in 2025, with Nobitex serving roughly 15 million users, highlighting the scale of digital asset integration into the domestic economy.
Analytics firm Elliptic reported that the central bank acquired at least $507 million in Tether last year, while Chainalysis estimated significant crypto flows linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
A subsequent report from the Financial Action Task Force found stablecoins accounted for 84% of illicit crypto transaction volume in 2025 and explicitly referenced Iranian proliferation financing, urging issuers to adopt freeze, burn and deny-list capabilities.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
US spot Bitcoin ETFs add $225M as BlackRock’s IBIT offsets redemptions

Analyst to XRP Traders: This Is Where the Reaction Should Be Taking Place
Morpho Bolsters Its Standing as Institutional Crypto Custody Evolves
Bitdeer's Earnings Surprise: A Textbook Example of 'Selling on the News'
