TL;DR
- Russia’s daily cryptocurrency volume reaches 50 billion rubles.
- The Bank of Russia proposes crypto operations through authorized exchanges.
- Moscow aims to capture the $15 billion Russian users pay to foreign platforms annually.
Russian authorities cite daily cryptocurrency turnover reaching approximately 50 billion rubles as regulators accelerate plans for comprehensive oversight. The Bank of Russia advanced a draft framework allowing cryptocurrency operations through existing exchanges and brokers under structured supervision, with approval expected by mid-year following State Duma review during the spring session.
The proposed system creates access tiers for qualified and non-qualified investors, imposing specific limits by user category to contain systemic risk. The framework also establishes new compliance requirements for intermediaries currently operating without authorization, forcing informal market participants to either obtain formal licenses or exit.
Officials set a transition period enabling platforms to assemble licensing and compliance packages before full enforcement begins. Financial institutions already prepare for operational adjustments including risk controls, reporting systems, and client verification procedures as the regulatory perimeter expands.
Stablecoin Classification and Capital Flight Prevention Drive Supervision Strategy
Russian agencies classify Bitcoin and fiat-linked stablecoins as “currency assets” requiring processing through controlled systems. The designation routes crypto flows through domestic financial architecture rather than offshore channels, addressing capital flight concerns and supporting macroeconomic stability. Regulators aim to limit arbitrage between traditional payment rails and digital alternatives by channeling stablecoin activity through supervised institutions.
Chainalysis reports Russia now ranks as Europe’s largest crypto market, an outcome shaped by sanctions squeezing conventional cross-border payments. The constraint pushed users toward cryptocurrency solutions for transfers and savings, creating the volume officials now seek to supervise.

Rosfinmonitoring, Russia’s financial watchdog, operates the Transparent Blockchain service tracking inflows and outflows on major networks. The agency estimates Russian users hold nearly one trillion rubles on foreign exchanges operating outside domestic legal frameworks. Offshore platforms expose users to legal uncertainty and counterparty risk, motivating policymakers to shift activity toward licensed domestic bodies.
The Moscow Exchange positions itself at the center of the transition, targeting up to $15 billion in annual fees Russian users currently pay foreign crypto platforms. Exchange executives view the regulatory framework as an opening to expand beyond traditional securities and derivatives, arguing regulated services could redirect substantial volumes back to national infrastructure.
Officials estimate global exchanges collectively earn approximately $50 billion annually from cryptocurrency trading commissions, with Russian clients representing nearly one-third of the total. The share underscores how much activity currently bypasses national supervision and tax structures.





