Posted on 12 Jun 2026
Cryptocurrency has shifted from a supplementary payment method into a core enabler of organized crime and cyber-enabled illicit activity.
Across a range of illicit activities, crypto facilitates the movement and laundering of funds, supporting increasingly sophisticated financial architectures that combine decentralized and regulated systems. As adoption expands, particularly through stablecoins and accessible platforms, barriers to entry are lowered, enabling greater scale, resilience and geographic dispersion, and positioning cryptocurrency as a strategic asset that is reshaping global illicit economies.
Cryptocurrencies have streamlined the movement of illicit funds and strengthened the financial resilience of organized crime by integrating laundering, transfer and conversion functions. The result is the emergence of a layered and adaptive laundering ecosystem in which exchanges, stablecoins, brokers and informal financial networks collectively provide the infrastructure through which illicit capital can circulate globally with unprecedented speed and flexibility.
In addition, the evidence shows that cryptocurrencies are not merely augmenting existing criminal practices but transforming them across several sectors, including cyber-enabled fraud, drug trafficking, human exploitation and sanctions evasion.
Without more coordinated and adaptive responses, current regulatory and enforcement frameworks are unlikely to keep pace with the scale, sophistication and transnational nature of crypto-enabled crime.
This report examines how cryptocurrencies are reshaping the operational and financial dynamics of organized crime, with particular attention to the emergence of increasingly complex laundering ecosystems, the expansion of crypto-enabled criminal markets and the growing convergence between licit and illicit financial infrastructures.