Binance Research has stated that illicit cryptocurrency transactions account for less than 1% of total on-chain volume, a claim that positions blockchain-based crime as a small fraction of overall network activity.
What Binance Research Says About Illicit Crypto Activity
The less-than-1% figure, attributed to Binance Research, measures illicit transactions as a proportion of on-chain volume. That scope is narrower than it might appear. On-chain volume captures only transactions recorded on public blockchains, excluding off-chain activity processed internally by exchanges or through private settlement channels.
The metric specifically refers to the share of value moving through blockchain networks that can be tied to known illicit addresses. It does not account for crimes occurring off-chain, scams where funds have not yet been flagged, or activity on chains with limited analytics coverage.
This framing aligns with findings from blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis, which has published annual reports tracking the share of cryptocurrency transaction volume tied to illicit addresses. Chainalysis noted in its 2023 Crypto Crime Report that illicit activity represents a relatively small share of total crypto transaction volume.
Why the Sub-1% Figure Requires Careful Interpretation
A sub-1% share of on-chain volume can still represent billions of dollars in absolute terms. Total cryptocurrency transaction volume regularly exceeds tens of billions of dollars per day, meaning even a fraction of a percent translates into significant sums flowing through illicit channels.
The percentage also depends on how “illicit” is defined and which addresses have been flagged by analytics providers. Chainalysis and similar firms continuously update their attribution databases, meaning the percentage for any given year can shift as new wallet clusters are identified. The Chainalysis 2024 Crypto Crime Report expanded its methodology to capture a broader range of illicit fund flows.
The percentage-of-volume framing can challenge public perceptions that cryptocurrency is primarily used for crime. But it can also understate the problem if taken at face value. Absolute dollar figures, victim counts, and the sophistication of laundering techniques all provide a fuller picture that a single percentage cannot capture.
Binance itself has faced regulatory scrutiny in multiple jurisdictions over compliance controls. The sub-1% figure, while drawn from industry-wide data, serves a narrative purpose for an exchange working to rebuild its compliance reputation. Readers should weigh the claim alongside its source.
Regulatory efforts continue to evolve alongside these findings. The Clarity Act advancing through the Senate Banking Committee reflects ongoing legislative interest in defining how digital assets are classified and monitored, which could affect how illicit activity is tracked going forward.
As institutional products like CME Group’s planned crypto index futures bring more regulated volume onto the market, the denominator in that percentage grows, potentially pushing the illicit share lower without any reduction in actual criminal activity. Meanwhile, developments like Coinbase becoming Hyperliquid’s USDC treasury deployer show how centralized and decentralized infrastructure continues to converge, adding complexity to how on-chain activity is categorized.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
