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Policy

US Treasury Sanctions Iran-Based Crypto Exchange Nobitex

The U.S. Treasury Department has sanctioned Nobitex, Iran's largest cryptocurrency exchange, along with three other Iranian platforms and several senior executives, in what analysts are calli

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 4, 2026
4 min read
NEWS
US Treasury Sanctions Iran-Based Crypto Exchange Nobitex
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

The U.S. Treasury Department has sanctioned Nobitex, Iran's largest cryptocurrency exchange, along with three other Iranian platforms and several senior executives, in what analysts are calling the most aggressive federal enforcement action yet against Iran's digital asset economy.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) announced on June 2, 2026 that it designated Nobitex under Executive Orders 13224 and 13902, targeting the platform for operating within Iran's financial sector and facilitating transactions linked to sanctioned entities. OFAC also designated Nobitex's chairman and co-founder, Amir Hossein Rad, alongside other company leaders.

TLDR Keypoints

  • OFAC sanctioned Nobitex, Wallex, Bitpin, and Ramzinex, four Iranian crypto exchanges collectively responsible for the majority of Iran's digital asset activity.
  • Treasury said Nobitex processed more than 50 percent of all Iranian digital asset inflows in 2025 and helped Iran's central bank access hundreds of millions of dollars in stablecoins.
  • Foreign financial institutions now face secondary-sanctions exposure for dealings with any of the four designated exchanges.

What the Treasury action against Nobitex means

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent framed the action as a direct response to Iran's use of crypto infrastructure to circumvent economic pressure.

"While Iran's economy is in free fall, the regime has chosen to co-opt digital asset technologies for its own corrupt agenda."

— Scott Bessent, U.S. Treasury Secretary (Treasury press release)

Treasury said Nobitex processed more than 50 percent of all Iranian digital asset inflows in 2025 and helped the Central Bank of Iran access hundreds of millions of dollars in stablecoins.

Iranian digital asset inflows in 2025 >50% Treasury said Nobitex processed more than 50 percent of all Iranian digital asset inflows in 2025.

The action extended beyond Nobitex. OFAC's June 2 update also added Wallex, Bitpin, and Ramzinex to the sanctions list. Treasury said Wallex handled 12 percent of Iranian digital asset inflows in 2025, Bitpin accounted for 10 percent, and Ramzinex processed over $2.45 billion in lifetime transactions.

Ramzinex lifetime transactions $2.45B+ Treasury said Ramzinex processed over $2.45 billion in lifetime transactions.

Why Nobitex matters in the crypto compliance conversation

The sanctions carry consequences well beyond Iranian borders. OFAC FAQ 1257 explicitly warns that non-U.S. persons and foreign financial institutions face sanctions exposure for significant transactions involving Nobitex, Wallex, Bitpin, or Ramzinex. This secondary-sanctions framework means international exchanges and payment processors must now screen for and block any interaction with these platforms or risk U.S. enforcement.

This builds on regulatory groundwork laid weeks earlier. On May 1, 2026, OFAC FAQ 1250 established that Iranian digital asset exchanges qualify as blocked Iranian financial institutions under Executive Order 13599 and the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations. The June 2 designations applied that framework to specific named entities for the first time at this scale.

Chainalysis described the action as Treasury's largest enforcement move yet against Iran's digital asset economy, highlighting the immediate need for compliance teams at international firms to update their screening protocols. The pressure on global exchanges to cut ties with sanctioned Iranian platforms echoes broader market stress already visible in Bitcoin's recent slide below $65,000.

What this could signal for the broader crypto market

The Nobitex action establishes a clear precedent: Treasury is willing to target entire exchange ecosystems, not just individual wallets or facilitators. By sanctioning four platforms that collectively handled the majority of Iranian crypto volume, OFAC has signaled that country-level exposure is now a primary enforcement vector.

For compliance teams, the immediate watchlist includes any platform with residual Iranian user bases, stablecoin issuers whose tokens circulated through these exchanges, and OTC desks that may have processed flows originating from Nobitex or its peers. The secondary-sanctions mechanism means even firms with no U.S. nexus face potential consequences.

The enforcement action lands during a period of heightened market sensitivity, with Bitcoin trading near $64,203 and the Fear & Greed Index sitting at 12, deep in "Extreme Fear" territory. While sanctions headlines do not automatically trigger broad selloffs, the combination of regulatory escalation and fragile sentiment gives compliance-driven derisking added weight in current market conditions.

Market observers should watch for follow-on actions, particularly whether OFAC extends similar designations to exchanges in other sanctioned jurisdictions, and whether stablecoin issuers take independent blocking action against wallets linked to the four designated platforms.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

Read original article on coinlive.me