Crypto Flows to Suspected Human Trafficking Surge 85% in 2025, Chainalysis Finds
Source: Fintech News SG
Cryptocurrency flows to suspected human trafficking services reached hundreds of millions of dollars in 2025, an 85% year-on-year surge driven by Southeast Asia's expanding scam compound ecosystem, according to Chainalysis' 2026 Crypto Crime Report. The blockchain analytics firm tracked four categor

Cryptocurrency flows to suspected human trafficking services reached hundreds of millions of dollars in 2025, an 85% year-on-year surge driven by Southeast Asia's expanding scam compound ecosystem, according to Chainalysis' 2026 Crypto Crime Report.
The blockchain analytics firm tracked four categories of crypto-facilitated trafficking: Telegram-based "international escort" services, "labour placement" agents linked to pig-butchering compounds, child sexual abuse material vendors, and forced-labour operations. Nearly half (48.8%) of transfers to escort networks exceeded US$10,000, pointing to organised criminal enterprises operating at scale. These services run almost exclusively on stablecoins, with tight ties to Chinese-language money-laundering networks that rapidly convert USDT into local currencies.
Labour placement agents connected to scam compounds show identifiable payment patterns between US$1,000 and US$10,000 — consistent with advertised recruitment pricing tiers. Some agents operate through mainstream cryptocurrency exchanges, creating blockchain-trailable evidence for law enforcement. The report also notes that CSAM vendors are increasingly turning to Monero and instant exchangers to launder proceeds.
Why it matters for Singapore: Southeast Asia's illicit crypto ecosystem operates across borders, and Singapore sits at the centre of the region's regulated crypto infrastructure. The transparent nature of blockchain makes detection possible — compliance teams at Singapore-based financial institutions and licensed crypto exchanges can watch for warning signs such as high-volume guarantee-platform transactions and wallet clusters linked to multi-account exchanges. For MAS-regulated entities, these findings underscore the importance of transaction monitoring frameworks that look beyond simple typology checks.