
EU sanctions Russian crypto usage for 20th time adding bans on digital rubles and anyone using Russian crypto services
The European Union’s latest Russia sanctions package, its twentieth so far, brings crypto settlement squarely into an already fractured geopolitical spotlight. Adopted on April 23, the package adds 120 new listings and...
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Blockchain ekosistemine dair önemli bir haber gündeme geldi. The European Union’s latest Russia sanctions package, its twentieth so far, brings crypto settlement squarely into an already fractured geopolitical spotlight. Adopted on April 23, the package adds 120 new listings and rolls out financial measures that touch just about every corner of Russia’s crypto scene. That includes service providers, decentralized trading platforms, ruble-backed tokens, payment agents, and even support for the digital rouble.
Earlier rounds of restrictions mostly went after specific exchanges, wallets, or operators. This time, the EU is aiming higher up the stack, targeting the service layer that keeps Russia-linked crypto settlement running. That means third-country platforms and tools that can keep money moving globally, even if a particular exchange gets shut down.
Piyasa Dinamikleri
Related Reading Sanctions risk is forcing a rethink of reserve safety — and Bitcoin is now in the debate Reserve managers are starting to ask not just what is safe, but what stays usable when politics, sanctions, or conflict hit. Apr 2, 2026 Gino Matos The EU frames these new rules as a way to close loopholes. According to Council materials , Russia is leaning more and more on crypto for international payments as traditional finance routes get squeezed by sanctions.
The package is the bloc's largest move to sanction Russia in years, with crypto restrictions among its most specific measures. The real test now is whether Europe can actually measure crypto settlement risk at the infrastructure level. That means platforms have to dig deeper than exchange names and look at where a provider is based, which tokens are in play, which settlement agents are involved, and whether the route relies on a state-backed digital currency.
The Ban Moves Down The Stack The Commission says this package brings a blanket ban on doing business with any Russian crypto asset service provider. It also covers decentralized platforms if they’re being used to get around sanctions. Now, where a provider is based and how it operates matter just as much as whether it’s been named on a sanctions list.
Piyasalara Etkisi
TRM Labs ties the measure to platform succession risk after Garantex was disrupted. Its analysis of the package points to the Garantex-to-Grinex migration and the role of A7A5 as the bridge between those systems. Chainalysis reaches a similar conclusion from a compliance angle.
Its 20th package analysis describes the measure as a move against categories of evasion infrastructure rather than single named entities. Related Reading EU sanctions Russian crypto exchange Garantex over Ukraine conflict ties The EU aims to close financial loopholes by directly sanctioning a Russian crypto exchange for the first time. Feb 25, 2025 Oluwapelumi Adejumo It’s one thing to screen a wallet address or exchange name.
It’s a whole different challenge to spot a service provider set up in Russia, a third-country platform with Russian liquidity, or a settlement route built around a sanctioned token. The Financial Times had already reported that EU officials were weighing a broad ban on Russian crypto transactions. Prior coverage of that proposal shows the continuity: Brussels was already testing a broader enforcement perimeter before the package was adopted.
Kripto piyasaları, bu gelişmenin ardından yakından takip ediliyor. Yatırımcılar, söz konusu haberin fiyatlar üzerindeki olası etkilerini değerlendiriyor.




