Iran’s Bitcoin Usage Surges After US-Israel Airstrikes

On February 28, 2026, U.S.-Israeli airstrikes struck key targets across Tehran, including nuclear facilities, missile sites, and the Pasteur district, where Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei resided. 

Hours later, reports confirmed Khamenei’s death and the deaths of other senior officials. Amid the shock, Iranians turned to bitcoin as a channel for preserving value and moving funds outside the country’s collapsing financial infrastructure.

On-chain data compiled by Chainalysis shows a sharp surge in cryptoactivity from major Iranian exchanges in the hours following the strikes. 

Between February 28 and March 2, roughly $10.3 million in crypto assets flowed out of exchanges, a spike that mirrors patterns observed throughout 2025. 

Chainalysis’ analysis of Iran’s $7.8 billion crypto ecosystem highlighted how trading volumes and withdrawals typically rise during periods of domestic unrest and geopolitical shocks, reflecting the real pressures faced by ordinary citizens and state actors alike.

Breaking down the outflows, Chainalysis identified three plausible drivers. First, individual Iranians appear to move funds from centralized exchanges to personal wallets, seeking self-custody amid instability.