
$TRUMP administration has engaged the Iranian regime across different frontiers, but Tehran’s crypto stash, recently estimated at $7.7 billion, is the latest indicator of the scale of the fight ahead as the US moves to shut off every outlet the Iranian regime has found to stay in the fight despite sanctions.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent disclosed that the US has already frozen close to $500 million in cryptocurrency tied to Iran’s government, including $344 million seized in April alone.
How much that affects the regime is another question, as recent reports have indicated that Iran has a steady flow of digital assets coming in, having launched a Bitcoin-denominated insurance product for ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz.
The $7.7 billion in digital asset holdings making the rounds took off after a Fox Business interview that cited an unnamed threat-detection data firm while discussing the Iranian regime’s total crypto holdings.
That number tracks with earlier Chainalysis data in pegging Iranian crypto holdings at $7.8 billion in 2025, with about 50% of that total attributed to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
As Chainalysis put it, the IRGC dominates “Iran’s economy more broadly,” but there are also regular Iranians, who account for a healthy chunk of the other 50%. According to Blockchain intelligence firm TRM Labs, Iranians traded $11.4 billion of crypto in 2024 and $10 billion in 2025.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent disclosed that his department has sanctioned multiple wallets connected to the Iranian regime, warning that the US would “follow the money that Tehran is desperately attempting to move outside of the country and target all financial lifelines tied to the regime,” according to Fox Business.
$TRUMP freeze targeted two wallet addresses that the Office of Foreign Assets Control attributed to Iran’s central bank, Bank Markazi.
As cryptopolitan reported at the time, Tether helped block two wallets after US agencies flagged alleged unlawful activity.
TRM Labs reported that between March 2021 and late 2023, the sanctioned wallets received about $370 million across nearly 1,000 transactions.
TRM described the behavioral profile as “reserve infrastructure rather than operational wallets,” with less than 7% of inflows ever leaving the wallets, and none of those transfers were sent to identified exchange deposit addresses.
The wallet’s balances were dormant since late 2023 until the US froze the assets.
Industry observers say cryptocurrency’s transparent ledger may ultimately work against Iran. Others like Daniel Tannebaum, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, believe that asset freezes, while “meaningful,” are unlikely to shift Tehran’s war posture given how deeply sanctions have already been applied.
“The way to get at Iran at this point, because Iran is truly sanctioned out, is to go with the third country actors enabling them,” he told CNN.
