As the sun set over Tehran on the 29th of December, the winter cold wasn’t the only thing filling the air. Shutters slammed shut across the Grand Bazaar, thanks to the rapid collapse of the Iranian Rial.
With the currency crashing to a record 1.42 million per U.S. dollar, anger spilled onto the streets.
As protesters clashed with tear gas, the moment revealed a harsh truth: when a government-controlled currency fails, ordinary people pay the price.
And while Tehran searches for political solutions, global analysts are turning their attention to the blockchain.
Hunter Horsley, CEO of Bitwise, weighed in on the unfolding crisis, suggesting that the chaos in Iran is a reminder of why Bitcoin [BTC] was created.
“Economic mismanagement — The story of the past, present, and future. Bitcoin is a new way for the people to protect themselves.”
How did this originate in the first place?
That being said, the Rial’s crash isn’t sudden; it’s the result of 40 years of currency decline. Since the brief conflict with Israel in June 2025 alone, the Rial has lost over 40% of its value.
Today, at 1.4 million per dollar, the currency barely holds meaning for millions watching their savings disappear. The crisis has now spread to the banking system.
In October, Bank Melli, already absorbing a failed bank, began showing signs of instability. With 42 million Iranians depending on it, the risk is massive.
Instead of fixing the problem, the Central Bank spent the year issuing warnings to other struggling banks. The situation got so bad that the Central Bank’s governor resigned this week, right as the Rial hit its lowest point.
How is Bitcoin the savior?
While the state fails to provide a stable currency, it has simultaneously moved to block the exits.
Iran presents a unique paradox: it offers some of the world’s cheapest electricity, making the cost to mine a single Bitcoin roughly $1,300.
With Bitcoin currently trading near $87,600, the profit margin is astronomical, offering a lifeline for citizens to generate “hard” global value.
However, the regime has labeled this survival tactic a crime.
While Tehran’s streets serve as a haunting reminder of the fragility of centralized finance, the global market is shifting its gaze toward 2026.
The 2026 bullish convergence
The year 2025 has been a sobering “red year” for Bitcoin, its first since the 2022 collapse, defined by a “metal war” with China, U.S. tariff tensions, and a grueling liquidity crunch.
But by 2026, the reduced issuance of new BTC will meet a wall of institutional demand from ETFs and sovereign reserves.
For the citizens of Iran, Bitcoin represents an immediate, desperate escape from a bankrupt banking system. But for the global investor, it represents a strategic hedge against a repeating cycle of fiat debasement.
Whether Bitcoin hits the projected $170,000 to $250,000 range in 2026 depends on these macro tailwinds holding steady.
Final Thoughts
- The Rial’s fall from 70 to 1.4 million per dollar is a warning to the world about the fragility of state-run currencies.
- Iran’s crisis is one of the clearest demonstrations of why Bitcoin exists: to give people an exit when their money fails.
Source: https://ambcrypto.com/iran-crisis-as-the-rial-collapses-can-bitcoin-be-the-countrys-lifeline/