EU Moves to Ban All Crypto Transactions with Russian Entities: Report
The European Commission is seeking to impose an EU-wide ban on all crypto transactions with Russia, as part of ongoing efforts to ensure the effectiveness of sanctions.
According to official documents seen by the Financial Times, the ban would prohibit any EU-based individual or entity from transferring cryptocurrencies to and from a Russia-based counterparty.
The proposed ban is a response to instances where sanctioned Russian crypto service providers have simply relaunched under different names, as has been witnessed in the case of shuttered exchange Garantex, which reemerged last year as Grinex.
Sanctioned Russian Exchange Garantex Suspected of Rebrand as Grinex
The European Commission is aware of this problem, with the internal document noting that any “further listing of individual cryptoasset service providers [is] likely to result in the set-up of new ones to circumvent those listings.”
Given this probability, the Commission is seeking to prohibit transactions “with any crypto asset service provider, or to make use of any platform allowing the transfer and exchange of crypto assets that is established in Russia.”
This new proposal has been put forward with an additional measure that would ban the export of some dual-use goods to Kyrgyzstan, with both policies requiring support from all 27 EU member states before becoming enforceable.
Three member states have voiced concerns over the potential new measures, according to unnamed diplomatic sources, something which may undermine plans to implement the bans in time for the fourth anniversary of Russia’s incursion into Ukraine on February 24.
The EU’s sanctions envoy David O’ Sullivan will also be travelling to Kyrgyzstan later in February, in order to communicate the bloc’s concerns over the Kyrgyz Republic’s lax stance towards sanctioned Russian entities.
This relates not only to the ability of sanctioned exchanges to rebrand, but also to the growth of the A7 network and its ruble-pegged stablecoin A7A5, which passed $100 billion in transaction volume in January.
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Much of this volume was processed in 2025, with the 2026 TRM Crypto Crime Report indicating that A7A5 and its associated wallet network handled approximately $70 billion in sanctions-related flows last year.
According to TRM Labs’ Global Head of Policy Ari Redbord, this ecosystem didn’t emerge by accident, having evolved into a “mature, industrialized system” built to support ransomware gangs, darknet markets and “large-scale” sanctions evasion.

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