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    Turkey Tightens Grip On Crypto To Foil Money Launderers

    Turkey’s Ministry of Treasury and Finance rolled out new rules this week to stop money laundering through crypto trades. Users now have to put in a transfer note of at least 20 characters explaining why they’re moving funds.

    At the same time, platforms must collect clear proof of where the money came from. These steps come as crypto use in Turkey has surged, driven by high inflation and a shaky currency.

    New Transfer Rules Take Effect

    According to the Treasury and Finance Ministry, every crypto transfer needs a note that’s at least 20 characters long. Users must say what the transfer is for. Crypto Asset Service Providers, or CASPs, will ask for documents and details to show where funds originated. The aim is to make it harder for bad actors to hide illicit gains in thousands of transactions each day.

    Withdrawal Delays To Curb Crime?

    Based on reports from officials, first-time withdrawals will face a 72-hour waiting period. After that, any withdrawal that doesn’t meet the FATF “travel rule” will be delayed by at least 48 hours. The goal is simple. Give investigators a window to check if funds come from illegal betting or online fraud before they disappear.

    Turkey Sets Limits On Stablecoin Moves

    Authorities will cap stablecoin transfers at $3,000 per day and $50,000 per month. Platforms that fully follow travel-rule checks can double their users’ limits to $6,000 daily and $100,000 monthly. This tiered system pushes exchanges toward higher compliance without shutting out small traders who move modest sums.

    Users active in market making, liquidity provision, or cross-market arbitrage can skip some of the tighter checks if they show proof of clean funds. They must work through licensed platforms and provide clear documents. This exemption acknowledges that professional traders add volume and keep prices stable.

    Penalties For Platforms That Don’t Comply

    Treasury and Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek warned that any CASP ignoring the new rules could face heavy fines, license denial, or outright cancellation. Platforms will need stronger KYC teams and new software systems to tag transfers with notes and verify sources. Smaller outfits could struggle with the added cost.

    A Balancing Act For Crypto’s Future

    Crypto adoption in Turkey ranks among the highest in the world. Officials don’t want to slow growth. They argue these steps guard honest users while making it much harder for criminals to exploit the market.

    As the rules kick in, domestic exchanges will race to update their systems. Traders may grumble about extra paperwork and waiting times. Still, many believe the extra checks will give institutions and big-time investors more confidence to join in.

    Featured image from Chainalysis, chart from TradingView

    image

    Trusted Editorial content, reviewed by leading industry experts and seasoned editors. Ad Disclosure

    Turkey’s Ministry of Treasury and Finance rolled out new rules this week to stop money laundering through crypto trades. Users now have to put in a transfer note of at least 20 characters explaining why they’re moving funds.

    At the same time, platforms must collect clear proof of where the money came from. These steps come as crypto use in Turkey has surged, driven by high inflation and a shaky currency.

    Related Reading: 21 Years Later: Michael Saylor Sees Bitcoin At $21 Million—Details

    New Transfer Rules Take Effect

    According to the Treasury and Finance Ministry, every crypto transfer needs a note that’s at least 20 characters long. Users must say what the transfer is for. Crypto Asset Service Providers, or CASPs, will ask for documents and details to show where funds originated. The aim is to make it harder for bad actors to hide illicit gains in thousands of transactions each day.

    Withdrawal Delays To Curb Crime?

    Based on reports from officials, first-time withdrawals will face a 72-hour waiting period. After that, any withdrawal that doesn’t meet the FATF “travel rule” will be delayed by at least 48 hours. The goal is simple. Give investigators a window to check if funds come from illegal betting or online fraud before they disappear.

    image

    Total crypto market cap at $3.24 trillion on the daily chart: TradingView

    Turkey Sets Limits On Stablecoin Moves

    Authorities will cap stablecoin transfers at $3,000 per day and $50,000 per month. Platforms that fully follow travel-rule checks can double their users’ limits to $6,000 daily and $100,000 monthly. This tiered system pushes exchanges toward higher compliance without shutting out small traders who move modest sums.

    Users active in market making, liquidity provision, or cross-market arbitrage can skip some of the tighter checks if they show proof of clean funds. They must work through licensed platforms and provide clear documents. This exemption acknowledges that professional traders add volume and keep prices stable.

    Turkey is launching new crypto rules to curb dirty money. Image: Nordic Monitor.

    Penalties For Platforms That Don’t Comply

    Treasury and Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek warned that any CASP ignoring the new rules could face heavy fines, license denial, or outright cancellation. Platforms will need stronger KYC teams and new software systems to tag transfers with notes and verify sources. Smaller outfits could struggle with the added cost.

    Related Reading: Bitcoin Weathers The Iran-Israel Storm Better Than Wall Street’s Best—Analyst

    A Balancing Act For Crypto’s Future

    Crypto adoption in Turkey ranks among the highest in the world. Officials don’t want to slow growth. They argue these steps guard honest users while making it much harder for criminals to exploit the market.

    As the rules kick in, domestic exchanges will race to update their systems. Traders may grumble about extra paperwork and waiting times. Still, many believe the extra checks will give institutions and big-time investors more confidence to join in.

    Featured image from Chainalysis, chart from TradingView

    image

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