Ireland has placed crypto assets in its highest financial crime risk category. It marks a significant shift in how the country views the rapidly growing sector. Irish authorities identified cryptocurrencies as a very serious danger for both money laundering and terrorist financing in their first specialised digital asset risk assessment in seven years.
The move represents a notable increase from the medium-high rating assigned in the country’s previous assessment conducted in 2019. Officials say the decision reflects the evolving nature of financial crime, as digital assets become increasingly integrated into global financial networks.
The revised evaluation is a component of Ireland’s larger National Risk Assessment on Proliferation Financing, Terrorist Financing, and Money Laundering. The government released a 30-point Action Plan to improve the nation’s defences against financial crime in conjunction with the study.
The misuse of cryptocurrency assets, complex fraud schemes, technological flaws, and increased worries about terrorist financing are just a few of the new threats that authorities have identified. Policymakers claim that financial crime has real-world repercussions that impact people, companies, and communities outside of the digital economy.
The action plan describes doable steps to better oversight of cryptocurrency-related operations. Also, improve intelligence sharing between agencies, improve anti-money laundering procedures, and boost ownership structure transparency. Additionally, it demands that financial crime investigators, tax authorities, and customs agencies work together more closely.
By the second half of 2027, Ireland intends to implement further regulations for the cryptocurrency sector as part of its long-term strategy. The program is an indication of ongoing efforts to coordinate monitoring of digital assets with more comprehensive frameworks for preventing financial crime.
Ireland has previously shown that it is prepared to increase oversight of cryptocurrencies. Legislators suggested limitations in 2022 that would prohibit political parties from taking donations of digital assets, such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and tokens with a privacy focus.
Coinbase Europe Limited was fined over $24 million by the Central Bank of Ireland in November 2025. It was particularly for violating anti-money laundering and counterterrorism funding regulations.
Even if Ireland still encourages financial innovation, the most recent evaluation makes it abundantly evident that regulators believe more robust protections are necessary to prevent the expansion of the cryptocurrency industry from compromising financial stability.
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