Cryptocurrency transactions linked to suspected human trafficking operations reached hundreds of millions of dollars in 2025, an 85% increase from 2024, as detailed in Chainalysis's 2026 Crypto Crime Report—which documented a record $154 billion in overall illicit crypto activity. The surge is linked to Southeast Asia-based scam compounds, online gambling sites, and Chinese-language money laundering networks. Blockchain transparency aids detection amid these rising threats.
Blockchain data firm Chainalysis's 2026 Crypto Crime Report highlights a sharp escalation in cryptocurrency use for human trafficking. "The dollar amounts significantly understate the human toll of these crimes, where the true cost is measured in lives impacted rather than money transferred," the firm stated.
The increase ties to operations in Southeast Asia-based scam compounds, online casinos, and Chinese-language money laundering networks on Telegram. Chainalysis identified four main categories: international escort services integrated with laundering networks (49% of transfers over $10,000); labor placement agents enabling kidnapping and forced labor in scam compounds; prostitution networks mainly using stablecoins (62% of transactions $1,000-$10,000); and child sexual abuse material (CSAM) vendors shifting to Monero (half of transactions under $100, often subscriptions).
Blockchain transparency enables detection via indicators like large regular payments to labor services, high-volume transactions through guarantee platforms, and Telegram recruitment links. The report notes overlaps between CSAM networks and sadistic extremism groups like "764" and "cvlt," which monetize sextortion via crypto. One dark web CSAM site used 5,800 addresses to generate over $530,000 since July 2022.
"The transparency of blockchain technology provides unprecedented visibility into these operations, creating unique opportunities for detection and disruption that would be impossible with traditional payment methods," the report concluded.