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The EU Just Banned All Russia-Based Crypto Providers In Its 20th Sanctions Package

Published Apr 28, 2026
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Summary:
  • The EU's 20th sanctions package, adopted April 23, prohibits EU persons from transacting with any crypto asset service provider established in Russia or Belarus, taking effect May 24, 2026.
  • The package adds Russia's RUBx stablecoin and digital ruble to the EU's banned crypto-asset list, blocking the digital ruble before its planned mass rollout in September 2026.
  • The EU also targets 20 Russian banks, four third-country banks tied to Russia's SPFS messaging network, and the Kyrgyz exchange Meer used to trade the previously sanctioned A7A5 stablecoin.

The EU spent two years going after individual Russian crypto exchanges, and they kept respawning. So the bloc switched playbooks and moved against the entire sector at once.

If a crypto provider is registered in Russia or Belarus, EU residents won't be able to touch it after May 24.

Why The EU Stopped Playing Whack-A-Mole

Last year, EU and U.S. authorities seized the Russian exchange Garantex, only to watch its operators relaunch under a near-identical interface called Grinex within months, with users migrating their balances over via a stablecoin called A7A5.

The EU sanctioned A7A5 in its 19th package, but the Commission concluded that more individual designations would just lead to more replacement platforms. The new package replaces that approach with a blanket ban on every Russia-based provider, not just the named ones.

The Digital Ruble Block

The 20th package also bans Russia's central bank digital currency before it has even launched.

The digital ruble is scheduled for a mass rollout in September, and the EU added it to the prohibited list now to close the door before Russia could use it for cross-border trade. The Belarusian digital ruble was added to the same banned list, alongside Russia's RUBx stablecoin.

What This Means For Compliance Teams

Until now, EU compliance teams could screen against named entities and known wallet addresses, which was relatively straightforward.

Now they have to identify whether any crypto counterparty is actually based in Russia at all, including new platforms that haven't been individually flagged yet. That shifts the work from list-checking to jurisdictional due diligence, which is a heavier lift on every transaction.

The package also takes aim at a Kyrgyz exchange called Meer, which had been used to trade the already-sanctioned A7A5 token outside Russia.

What To Watch

Watch whether other major jurisdictions follow the EU's lead, since the United States and the United Kingdom have so far stuck with named designations rather than sector-wide bans.

If they expand to the full Russian sector too, the global pressure on Russia's crypto rails becomes effectively total.

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