AllRoadsBitcoin
Bitcoin Myths · #3 of 20
The Myth
Bitcoin is only used by criminals.
Reality check

The ledger is public. The bitcoin crime rate is 0.15%.

More than 99.8% of Bitcoin transactions are completely legal. The traditional financial system launders an estimated 2 to 5 percent of global GDP every year. Bitcoin’s public blockchain records every transaction permanently, making it one of the most traceable financial networks ever built.

99.8%
of Bitcoin transactions are completely legal

Less than 0.15% of Bitcoin activity is linked to crime.

According to Chainalysis, illicit activity accounted for 0.15% of all Bitcoin transactions in 2022, down from 0.34% the year before. The share has declined every year as the network has grown and blockchain forensics have matured.
Illicit transaction rates: Bitcoin vs. traditional finance
Bitcoin 0.15%
of all transactions linked to illicit activity. Source: Chainalysis, 2022.
Fiat / Traditional Banking 2–5%
of global GDP laundered through the traditional financial system annually. Source: UN Office on Drugs and Crime.
Scale: 5% = 100% of bar width · Sources: Chainalysis 2023 · UN Office on Drugs and Crime
0.15%
Bitcoin illicit transaction rate (Chainalysis, 2022)
Down from 0.34% the prior year. The share has declined every year as forensics improved and the network grew.
2–5%
of global GDP laundered through fiat annually (UNODC)
That is $800 billion to $2 trillion moving through wire transfers, shell companies, and correspondent banking each year.
174K
BTC recovered from Silk Road by the FBI
Investigators followed the public ledger, not a warrant for private records. No hacking required.
Key takeaways
  • More than 99.8% of Bitcoin transactions are legal. The illicit share has declined every year as blockchain forensics have matured.
  • Bitcoin’s public blockchain records every transaction permanently. Law enforcement can trace fund flows without a subpoena.
  • The traditional financial system moves an estimated $800 billion to $2 trillion in laundered money each year. Cash leaves no digital trail.
  • The association between Bitcoin and crime is largely historical, rooted in Silk Road’s 2011 to 2013 notoriety, before blockchain forensics existed as a discipline.
Worth knowing

HSBC paid $1.9 billion in fines in 2012 for laundering hundreds of millions of dollars for Mexican drug cartels. Deutsche Bank paid $630 million in 2017 for a $10 billion Russian money-laundering scheme. Both kept their banking licenses and continued operating. No Bitcoin wallet has faced institutional consequences at that scale. Source: US Department of Justice.