Russia locks all domestic payments to the ruble, treats Bitcoin only as an investment, but pilots crypto for cross-border trade and rolls out a digital ruble CBDC.
Russia has prohibited the use of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies as legal tender within its borders, requiring all domestic payments to be conducted exclusively in rubles, according to government policy statements.
Russian lawmakers and the central bank classify cryptocurrencies strictly as investment instruments that can be held, traded, or speculated on, but not used to pay for goods or services, officials have stated. The restriction is anchored in a 2020 digital assets law, which explicitly bans crypto-based domestic payments and allows penalties for violations.
The Bank of Russia has maintained its opposition to private cryptocurrencies as a payment method. Officials have stated these assets carry high risk, lack sovereign backing, and threaten monetary sovereignty, according to public statements from the central bank.
Despite the domestic prohibition, Russia has approved the use of cryptocurrency for cross-border settlements under an experimental legal regime, authorities announced. The policy change follows sanctions and restricted access to international payment systems including SWIFT, which have limited Russia’s access to traditional financial infrastructure.
The cross-border cryptocurrency authorization allows businesses to move value outside Western-dominated payment rails for international trade purposes, according to government announcements.
Separately, Russia is advancing a digital ruble pilot program, the central bank has reported. The central bank digital currency is designed to strengthen oversight, traceability, and transaction efficiency, and will operate alongside cash and non-cash rubles rather than replacing them, according to the Bank of Russia.
The policies reflect Russia’s approach of rejecting decentralized cryptocurrencies for domestic use while permitting their use for cross-border transactions where they serve state interests, and developing a state-controlled digital currency alternative, according to analysts tracking Russian monetary policy.


