News AMP

Russia Greenlights Crypto for Global Trade With Landmark Bill

Russia greenlights crypto for global trade as the State Duma passes a landmark bill, reshaping payments and sanctions workarounds. Get the full update.

Russia’s lower house moved a long-debated crypto policy from theory to lawmaking on July 30, 2024, when the State Duma passed legislation creating an experimental regime for digital currency in cross-border settlements and exchange trading under central bank oversight, according to Interfax, CNBC and CoinDesk. The significance is not just legal. It is geopolitical. Moscow is building a sanctioned-trade workaround while still keeping cryptocurrency barred from ordinary domestic payments, a split approach that says a lot about where Russian policy is headed.

Last Updated: April 24, 2026, 00:00 UTC

Legislative Milestone: State Duma final reading passed on July 30, 2024

Core Change: Crypto allowed for cross-border settlements in an experimental regime

Domestic Rule: Crypto still not legal tender for routine payments inside Russia

State Duma Crosses Final-Vote Threshold on July 30, 2024

The key date is clear. On July 30, 2024, the State Duma passed a package of crypto-related laws in the third and final reading, according to Interfax and CoinDesk. One bill legalized cryptocurrency mining in Russia from November 1, 2024. Another created a special experimental legal regime, effective September 1, 2024, that gives the Bank of Russia authority to approve selected entities for cross-border settlements and exchange trading in digital currency. That timing matters because it shows Moscow did not merely float a policy concept. It locked in an operational framework with a start date, a regulator and a restricted user base.

Senate Banking Committee expected to take up key US Crypto Market Structure Bill in weeks, says official
byu/buddies2705 inCryptoMarkets

That is the part many headlines flattened. The legislation did not suddenly make crypto a free-for-all across the Russian economy. It carved out a narrow lane. Interfax reported that the pilot covers settlements in cryptocurrencies under foreign trade contracts and exchange trading under Bank of Russia supervision. CNBC, citing Reuters reporting and local media, also noted that the Duma gave the greenlight specifically for businesses to use cryptocurrencies in cross-border trade. In plain English, this is a sanctions-era trade tool, not a domestic retail payments revolution.

Derived Policy Metrics

Calculated Metric Current Value Reference Set Deviation Signal
Implementation Lag 33 days July 30, 2024 vote to Sept. 1, 2024 regime start N/A Fast-track rollout
Mining-to-Settlement Activation Gap 61 days Sept. 1, 2024 regime start to Nov. 1, 2024 mining law start N/A Trade rails prioritized before full mining effect
Policy Split Ratio 1 permitted use / 1 prohibited use Cross-border settlement allowed; domestic payment ban retained N/A Controlled externalization of crypto utility

Methodology: Calculations use dates and legal features reported by Interfax, CNBC and CoinDesk. Implementation Lag measures days between final Duma passage on July 30, 2024 and the experimental regime’s Sept. 1, 2024 start. Mining-to-Settlement Activation Gap measures days between Sept. 1, 2024 and Nov. 1, 2024. Updated: April 24, 2026, 00:00 UTC.

I have covered enough crypto policy cycles to know when a bill is symbolic and when it is infrastructure. This one leans infrastructure. The presence of a regulator, a pilot perimeter, and exact activation dates suggests the Kremlin wanted something usable for trade settlement, not just a political headline.

Why Sanctions Pressure Triggered a Narrow Crypto Opening

The immediate catalyst was not ideological conversion to Bitcoin. It was payment friction. CNBC reported that Russia approved the law allowing crypto for global payments as it continued to face sanctions pressure. Reuters, as cited by CNBC, quoted Duma Financial Market Committee head Anatoly Aksakov calling it a “historic decision in the financial sphere.” That line matters because it frames the move as a financial plumbing response, not a libertarian embrace of decentralized money.

Russia’s central bank had long been cautious, even hostile, toward broad crypto use. Yet by July 30, 2024, Governor Elvira Nabiullina said the regulator was itself looking to move money across borders using crypto before the end of 2024, CNBC reported. That is a major policy shift when compared with the central bank’s January 2022 proposal to ban broad crypto activity, a position still reflected in background legal analyses of Russian regulation. The historical contrast is sharp: from proposed prohibition in 2022 to supervised cross-border experimentation in 2024.

Event Sequence: Russia’s Crypto Trade Shift

January 2022: The Bank of Russia proposes broad restrictions on crypto activity, reflecting a hardline stance on financial stability and payment sovereignty. (Background legal summaries)

July 30, 2024: The State Duma passes the final reading of bills covering crypto mining and an experimental regime for cross-border settlements and exchange trading. (Interfax, CoinDesk)

September 1, 2024: The experimental legal regime is scheduled to take effect, allowing the central bank to authorize selected companies. (CoinDesk, The Global Treasurer)

November 1, 2024: The mining law is set to come into force, formalizing industrial crypto production inside Russia. (CoinDesk)

December 2024: Russia’s finance minister confirms companies are using Bitcoin in foreign trade under the new framework, according to Axios. (Axios)

The unique angle here is the sequencing. Most coverage focused on the headline that Russia “legalized crypto for international payments.” The more revealing point is that the settlement regime starts on September 1, 2024, while mining legalization starts on November 1, 2024. That 61-day gap suggests policymakers prioritized payment rails before fully formalizing domestic supply generation. It is a trade-settlement story first, a mining story second.

Cross-Border Permission Expands While Domestic Payment Ban Stays Intact

Here is the contradiction at the center of the law. Russia is opening crypto outward while keeping it constrained at home. Bankless Times and other later coverage of the 2026 legislative follow-up note that the domestic prohibition remains in place, and that continuity matches the 2024 framework. The International Bar Association’s summary of Russian crypto law also reflects the longstanding principle that cryptocurrency may not be used as a means of payment in ordinary supply, contractor or service agreements inside Russia.

Russia Couldn’t Ban Bitcoin. So Now It’s Making 20 Million Users Register Their Wallets Instead
byu/zakoal inethereum

That split is not accidental. It is policy design. By allowing crypto in foreign trade but not in domestic retail circulation, the state can try to capture the sanctions-evasion utility of digital assets without surrendering control over the ruble’s role inside the national economy. Analysis of the legislative structure reveals a two-track model: external flexibility, internal restriction. That is why the Bank of Russia sits at the center of the experimental regime. It is not decentralization. It is supervised exception-making.

⚠️
Policy Risk Alert: Legal Access Does Not Equal Universal Acceptance
Even after the July 30, 2024 Duma vote and the Sept. 1, 2024 experimental regime start, foreign counterparties still need legal and banking pathways to accept crypto-linked settlements. Axios noted on December 25, 2024 that permission from Moscow does not mean all other countries or banks will process such transactions. That leaves execution risk high, especially where Western compliance pressure remains intense.

There is another practical limit. The law empowers selected companies, not everyone. CoinDesk reported that the central bank can authorize approved firms to conduct cross-border settlements and exchange trading in digital currency. That means access is likely to be concentrated among strategically important entities, large exporters, or firms already close to state-controlled financial channels.

Can Russia Sustain Crypto Trade Rails Despite Compliance Friction?

The answer is yes in part, no in full. Yes, because the legal architecture exists: final Duma passage on July 30, 2024, experimental regime from September 1, 2024, mining legalization from November 1, 2024, and confirmation by late December 2024 that Russian companies were already using Bitcoin in foreign trade, according to Axios. No, because cross-border settlement is a network business. One country can authorize usage, but counterparties, exchanges, liquidity providers and banks still shape whether transactions clear smoothly.

Data Verification: The July 30, 2024 final-reading passage is confirmed by Interfax and CoinDesk. The cross-border trade framing is independently supported by CNBC’s report citing Reuters and local media. The September 1, 2024 start date for the experimental regime and the November 1, 2024 mining-law start date are both reported by CoinDesk and echoed in subsequent coverage.

For U.S. readers, the bigger significance is strategic. Russia’s move shows how crypto keeps being repurposed by states not as an ideological alternative to fiat, but as a pressure valve when access to conventional payment rails narrows. That does not make sanctions irrelevant. It does mean enforcement gets harder when settlement options multiply.

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly did Russia’s State Duma approve?

On July 30, 2024, the State Duma passed legislation in the third and final reading that created an experimental legal regime for using digital currency in cross-border settlements and exchange trading under Bank of Russia oversight. The same legislative package also legalized crypto mining, with that law taking effect on November 1, 2024, according to Interfax and CoinDesk.

Does the law make cryptocurrency legal for everyday payments inside Russia?

No. The framework is aimed at foreign trade and supervised exchange activity, not domestic retail payments. Russian law continues to keep the ruble as the main legal payment instrument, while crypto remains restricted for ordinary internal transactions, according to legal summaries and later reporting on the policy’s implementation.

Why did Russia move on crypto for global trade?

The main driver was sanctions-related payment friction. CNBC reported on July 30, 2024 that Russia approved the law allowing crypto for global payments as it faced ongoing sanctions pressure. The policy gives selected firms another route for cross-border settlement when traditional banking channels are harder to use.

When did the new regime start?

The experimental legal regime for cross-border settlements was set to begin on September 1, 2024, according to CoinDesk and other reports. That is 33 days after the State Duma’s final vote on July 30, 2024, showing a relatively fast implementation timeline for a major financial policy shift.

Is Russia actually using crypto in foreign trade now?

By December 25, 2024, Axios reported that Russia’s finance minister had confirmed Russian companies were using Bitcoin in foreign trade under the new legal framework. That suggests the policy moved beyond legislation into at least some real-world settlement activity, although scale and counterparties remain difficult to verify publicly.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and sanctions-related compliance issues carry significant legal and financial risk. Readers should consult qualified professionals before making decisions based on regulatory developments.

Share:

You're reading the fast AMP version. View full article →