Reports suggest Iran-linked groups are exploring Bitcoin-settled maritime insurance tied to the Strait of Hormuz.
Bitcoin News
A platform called Hormuz Safe is circulating on social media, claiming to offer Bitcoin (BTC)-settled maritime insurance for cargo crossing the Strait of Hormuz, a major global oil shipping route. The platform's website describes coverage that activates from the moment of payment confirmation. Payments are described as "settled in Bitcoin," according to screenshots of the site. The website was inaccessible as of May 18.
The Strait handles approximately one-fifth of the global oil trade. Many vessels have been blocked from transiting the route in recent months as regional tensions escalated. Reports indicate authorities began collecting toll revenue from ships in April 2026, the first time such measures had been imposed.
Restrictions Pressure Drives BTC Interest
Earlier reports described a tariff of $1 per barrel of oil, payable in BTC, from vessels seeking passage. A spokesperson for an exporters' union said at the time that payments had to be made within seconds to avoid detection under sanctions. US authorities separately froze $344 million in Tether (USDT) linked to the region in April 2026. Industry figures say that seizure may be driving a shift toward BTC as a settlement currency, given it has no central issuer capable of freezing funds. Scammers have previously defrauded shipping companies by demanding crypto for safe passage, complicating verification of any legitimate claims.
Dominick John, an analyst at Zeus Research, told Decrypt that BTC-settled insurance could work in "niche, sanctioned-trade workarounds." He said it is not practical for mainstream shipping due to sanctions risk, volatility, limited legal recognition, and lack of insurer support. Ryan Yoon, senior analyst at Tiger Research, described the platform's technical and legal viability as "highly doubtful," citing the absence of any confirmed users.
Agne Linge, a board advisor to Wefi, told Decrypt that transactions on Bitcoin's public ledger would expose any linked wallet addresses. She added that blockchain analytics firms would likely flag those flows quickly. John noted that crypto "does not solve" counterparty trust or enforceable reinsurance.
Europol announced on May 18 that investigators had identified 14,200 links tied to what it described as an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)-linked propaganda ecosystem. Andy Yajin Zhou, associate professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and co-founder of BlockSec, told Decrypt that such networks typically combine social media, hosting, messaging platforms, and crypto payment channels. Blockchain data can provide "useful investigative signals" for tracing fund flows, though it is usually "insufficient for definitive attribution" alone, Zhou said.
