Crypto crime didn’t just “come back” in 2025 — it industrialized. TRM Labs estimates $158 billion in incoming value to illicit entities last year, an all-time highCrypto crime didn’t just “come back” in 2025 — it industrialized. TRM Labs estimates $158 billion in incoming value to illicit entities last year, an all-time high

Crypto Crime 2025: $158B in Illicit Flows and the Rise of State-Scale “Crypto Rails”

2026/01/29 16:15
4 min read

Crypto crime didn’t just “come back” in 2025 — it industrialized. TRM Labs estimates $158 billion in incoming value to illicit entities last year, an all-time high, driven less by retail “darknet mythology” and more by sanctions-linked infrastructure, nation-state activity, scalable fraud, and professional laundering services.

Key Points

  • $158B in incoming value to illicit entities in 2025 (TRM), while illicit share dipped slightly to ~1.2% of attributed on-chain volume.
  • TRM’s “liquidity lens”: illicit entities captured ~2.7% of incoming VASP liquidity (a more operational risk metric than % of total chain volume).
  • Sanctions activity surged and was “overwhelmingly Russia-linked,” including heavy use of the A7A5 ruble-pegged stablecoin (TRM cites >$72B volume).
  • Hacks: TRM records $2.87B stolen across ~150 hacks; the Bybit breach alone accounted for ~$1.46B of losses.
  • Scams/fraud: TRM observed ~$35B sent to fraud schemes; stablecoins were 84% of verified fraud inflows.
  • Laundering is now “settlement infrastructure”: TRM notes >$60B flowing out of illicit wallets into services; Chainalysis highlights Chinese-language laundering networks at scale.
  • Independent lenses align on “record year” magnitude: Chainalysis estimates illicit addresses received at least $154B in 2025, with sanctions value up 694% YoY.

Short Narrative

For years, the industry sold a comforting story: “crime is down” because the percentage of illicit activity is shrinking. TRM’s 2025 data punctures that complacency. Yes, illicit share slipped from 1.3% to 1.2% — but the absolute value hit record highs because crypto’s usable liquidity and integration exploded.

The more important shift is qualitative: 2025 looks less like a scattered ecosystem of cybercriminals and more like a parallel financial layer—where sanctioned economies, professional fraud shops, and laundering brokers treat crypto rails as durable infrastructure.

Extended Analysis

1) Sanctions are no longer “edge cases” — they’re the growth engine

TRM flags sanctions-driven activity as the defining accelerant of 2025, dominated by Russia-linked flows and high-concentration stablecoin usage (A7A5). This is the playbook regulators fear most: purpose-built rails that reduce reliance on USD corridors and traditional correspondent chokepoints.

2) “Theft” is shifting from code to operations

TRM’s numbers show a year shaped by operational compromise (keys, access control, wallet infrastructure) more than “smart contract wizardry.” The Bybit theft sits at the center of gravity; the FBI publicly attributed the ~$1.5B Bybit hack to North Korea (“TraderTraitor”).

3) Fraud became a production line — and stablecoins are the conveyor belt

TRM’s fraud estimate (~$35B) pairs with a critical operational detail: stablecoins = 84% of verified fraud inflows. That tells compliance teams exactly where to look: not at “crypto” in general, but at stablecoin liquidity and on/off-ramp exposure.

4) Laundering is professionalized—and increasingly cross-chain

Reuters/Chainalysis describe fast-growing Chinese-language money-laundering networks and “guarantee platform” escrow models that help match launderers with clients at scale.
Meanwhile, Elliptic estimates >$21.8B in illicit/high-risk crypto laundered using cross-chain methods (bridges, DEXs, swap services) — a direct challenge to single-chain monitoring assumptions.

A FinTelegram framing: the 2025 “conversion stack”

If you want to understand crypto crime in 2025, stop asking “Which chain?” and start asking “Where is the conversion?”

  • Acquisition: scams, hacks, illicit markets
  • Conversion: stablecoins, OTC brokers, VASPs
  • Concealment: cross-chain swaps/bridges, peeling patterns, mixers/obfuscation services
  • Cash-out: fiat rails, payment processors, merchant networks, offshore entities

Actionable Insight

For compliance teams (VASPs, stablecoin issuers, fintechs, banks):

  1. Treat stablecoin flows as Tier-1 risk signals (fraud + sanctions), not as “neutral plumbing.”
  2. Implement liquidity-based monitoring (TRM’s lens): focus on deployable capital into your rails, not just % of chain volume.
  3. Build cross-chain tracing capability and red-flag rules for bridge/DEX routing.
  4. Harden operations: key management, privileged access, withdrawal policy, vendor controls—because “ops compromise” is the new exploit.
  5. Sanctions screening must be continuous and contextual (clusters, counterparties, typologies), not a checkbox at onboarding.

For regulators:
If 2025 is the template, enforcement has to move upstream: toward stablecoin governance, VASP liquidity gateways, and repeatable laundering platforms—the chokepoints criminals can’t avoid.

Call for Information

FinTelegram is tracking stablecoin rails, laundering brokers, “guarantee platform” escrow models, and cross-chain cash-out paths used in 2025. If you have insider information (compliance alerts, SAR patterns, blocked merchant lists, wallet clusters, bank-transfer payees, payment processors, or operational security failures), submit it confidentially via Whistle42.com.

Share Information via Whistle42
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