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    Home»Trading Strategies

    Crypto Laundering On Centralized Exchanges Declines: Report

    adminBy adminJanuary 28, 2026 Trading Strategies No Comments3 Mins Read
    Crypto Laundering On Centralized Exchanges Declines: Report
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    The use of centralized crypto exchanges for laundering illicit funds is on the decline, with Chinese-language money laundering networks now being used more than ever, according to Chainalysis.

    Chainalysis said in a report on Tuesday that informal service-based networks offered through Chinese-speaking channels have a wide variety of laundering-as-a-service businesses that use money mules, informal over-the-counter trade desks, and gambling platforms to mix and swap crypto.

    The networks emerged during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020, and now “dominate known crypto money laundering activity.”

    Centralized crypto exchanges have made strides to beef up customer checks and security in the last few years, as regulators globally have tightened rules on crypto platforms to crack down on illicit crypto transactions.

    Chinese-language networks see 20% of illicit crypto flows

    In the last five years, Chainalysis estimated that the Chinese-language networks have processed roughly 20% of tracked illicit crypto funds, coinciding with a steady decline in the use of centralized exchanges, which it said is because “exchanges can freeze funds.”

    Source: Chainalysis

    Chainalysis said that “compared to other laundering endpoints” since 2020, inflows to identified Chinese-language networks grew 7,325 times faster than those to centralized exchanges.

    “While [Chinese-language networks] are by no means the only facilitator of on-chain laundering, Chinese-language Telegram-based services now account for a disproportionate share of the attributed global on-chain money laundering landscape,” it added. 

    On-chain laundering ecosystem is growing

    The on-chain money laundering ecosystem has also seen significant growth, with Chainalysis estimating that over $82 billion in illicit funds were laundered in 2025, up from $10 billion in 2020.

    The Chinese-language networks were responsible for $16 billion, or roughly $44 million per day, it said, and a key driver behind the growth is the increasing accessibility and adoption of crypto.