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    MarketForces Africa » Cryptocurrency » Bitcoin Gains as Iran Demands Crypto for Toll Payment

    Bitcoin Gains as Iran Demands Crypto for Toll Payment

    Olu AnisereBy Olu AnisereApril 11, 2026Updated:April 11, 2026 Cryptocurrency No Comments2 Mins Read
    Bitcoin Gains as Iran Demands Crypto for Toll Payment
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    Bitcoin Gains as Iran Demands Crypto for Toll Payment

    Bitcoin (BTC) price surges to $72.8k on reports that Iran plans to toll the Strait of Hormuz with crypto payments amidst a ceasefire with the United States.

    BTC trading volume declined by 36.4% over the last 24 hours to $26 billion on Saturday, while the market capitalisation of the world’s largest digital asset stood at $1.45 trillion.

    Iran is reportedly demanding cryptocurrency, including Bitcoin, as tolls from oil tankers crossing the Strait of Hormuz, and that plan is drawing heavy technical and regulatory scrutiny.

    Reports say Iran is charging about $1 per barrel in crypto for Hormuz transit, with some ships asked to pay in Bitcoin within seconds after clearance.

    The development boosted investor optimism, driving renewed demand for digital assets. Analysts question whether Bitcoin or stablecoins will actually be used, and warn that any such system sits directly in the crosshairs of sanctions and compliance enforcement.

    For crypto users, this is a test case for state-level crypto payments in critical trade routes, and regulators, on-chain data and stablecoin policy will be key to watch next.

    Multiple outlets report that Iran’s Revolutionary Guard is extracting crypto tolls from tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, roughly $1 per barrel of oil, during a ceasefire period with the United States.

    There is no public Iranian decree, and follow-up reporting highlights conflicting accounts on whether tolls are actually to be paid in Bitcoin, in dollar-pegged stablecoins like USDT or USDC, or in Chinese yuan.

    Chainalysis argues that Iran’s guards have historically preferred stablecoins for large trade flows because they track the dollar and avoid Bitcoin’s volatility, even though the initial statements singled out BTC as an option.

    Bitcoin advocates counter that stablecoins can be frozen at the smart-contract level, while BTC has no issuer and no freeze switch, making it more attractive for a heavily sanctioned state.

    Shipping firms, however, face major compliance risks: paying wallets linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard could trigger secondary sanctions regardless of which token is used, and any stablecoin flows to those addresses would raise pressure on issuers to intervene. XRP Gains as Japan Classifies Token as Financial Asset

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    Olu Anisere
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    Olu Anisere is a financial and economic journalist at MarketForces Africa, specialising in African macroeconomic policy, international finance, energy markets, and continental development.He covers major multilateral institutions, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), providing readers with frontline reporting on policies shaping Africa's economic trajectory.Olu has reported extensively on Nigeria's fiscal and monetary policy landscape, including CBN interest rate decisions, Nigeria's bond market, FX inflows, and the country's engagement with global financial institutions.His coverage spans IMF and World Bank Spring and Annual Meetings, African Ministers of Finance conferences, and high-level economic forums where Africa's development agenda is set.His reporting captures perspectives from Africa's most influential economic voices, including Tony Elumelu, senior IMF officials, and CBN leadership, bringing institutional insight and policy depth to MarketForces Africa's readers.Olu also covers Inside Africa — tracking economic, investment, and development stories from across the continent. Olu Anisere is based in Lagos, Nigeria.

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