The European Commission has unveiled plans for a 21st sanctions package against Russia, widening its scope to include crypto service providers and financial intermediaries outside the European Union that help facilitate sanction evasion.
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the proposal would restrict around 20 non-EU entities, including digital asset platforms, financial institutions, and oil traders, from doing business with sanctioned Russian individuals and organizations. The package signals a broader effort to disrupt international networks supporting Russia’s economy.
Shift toward jurisdiction-wide crypto bans
A key element of the proposal is the potential introduction of a full ban on crypto services originating from certain non-EU jurisdictions linked to sanction circumvention. This marks a shift from targeting individual firms to restricting entire regions considered high-risk.
Under this approach, any crypto platform operating from a flagged jurisdiction could lose access to the EU market, even without direct ties to sanctioned Russian entities. Officials describe these networks as part of a growing “shadow financial system” enabling cross-border transactions beyond traditional oversight.
Rising crypto activity tied to Russia
The move follows a surge in illicit crypto flows. Chainalysis reported that such activity reached $154 billion in 2025, with $93.3 billion linked to Russia through the ruble-backed stablecoin A7A5. The scale of these transactions points to extensive use of blockchain infrastructure in maintaining financial flows under sanctions.
Additional data from TRM Labs suggests illicit wallets handled roughly $158 billion over the same period, reinforcing concerns among regulators about the increasing role of crypto in sanction evasion.
Global pressure intensifies
Other countries have taken similar steps. In February, Elliptic identified five digital asset firms providing alternatives to traditional banking channels for Russia. The United Kingdom recently sanctioned a trading platform over alleged ties to the Russian government, along with other crypto-related entities.
This coordinated action across jurisdictions is tightening the environment for platforms with exposure to Russian markets, increasing compliance risks for global operators.
Russia moves to localize digital asset activity
In parallel, Russia is advancing plans to formalize its domestic crypto market. A regulatory framework expected in July aims to establish locally licensed exchanges and bring digital asset activity under tighter state oversight.
The initiative is widely seen as an attempt to build a more self-contained financial system that can operate despite external restrictions.
Broader sanctions extend beyond crypto
The proposed package also expands restrictions on Russia’s energy and trade sectors, including measures targeting oil transport operations. Russian fisheries are set to be added to the EU blacklist for the first time.
Together, the measures reflect a broader escalation in the EU’s strategy to financially isolate Russia by targeting both traditional industries and emerging digital channels.
For deeper context on sanctions, regulation, and market impact, explore our daily brief: today-etfs-reverse-as-us-prepares-new-russia-sanctions.
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