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    You are at:Home » Chainalysis says crypto compliance is tighter, but AML gaps remain
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    Chainalysis says crypto compliance is tighter, but AML gaps remain

    James WilsonBy James WilsonMay 28, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Chainalysis says crypto firms entering the market in 2026 are starting with tougher compliance settings than many older firms used five years ago. 

    Summary

    • Chainalysis says 47% of 2026 crypto entrants now meet 2020’s strictest alerting standards overall.
    • Crypto exchanges still set higher indirect-alert thresholds than traditional banks, leaving weak monitoring gaps open.
    • Related market coverage shows AML pressure rising across Polymarket, Binance, stablecoins, and blockchain bridges.

    The finding points to a market where monitoring tools are now part of basic operating standards, not only a concern for large exchanges.

    The report’s main angle is clear: crypto companies have raised their alerting standards, but indirect exposure still leaves room for bad actors to move funds through extra wallet layers before detection.

    Chainalysis says new crypto firms use stricter alerts

    In a May 27 report preview, Chainalysis said nearly 47% of organizations onboarded in 2026 now use alerting standards that would have ranked in the top 10% for strictness in 2020. The firm measured alert severity, trigger sensitivity, and minimum dollar floors for indirect illicit exposure.

    Crypto compliance is stricter than ever. Nearly half of organizations onboarded in 2026 use monitoring standards that would have been in the top 10% just a few years ago. Get a preview of our upcoming “The New Rails” report to see how TradFi compares to crypto exchanges and why… pic.twitter.com/M3w6rAAzrN

    — Chainalysis (@chainalysis) May 27, 2026

    Chainalysis said the change shows how fast baseline compliance has moved since 2020, when many firms were still setting common rules for on-chain risk alerts. “Standard compliance configurations today would have been considered industry-leading just five years ago,” the firm said.

    Indirect monitoring remains the main weak spot

    The report draws a clear line between direct and indirect exposure. Direct exposure covers funds that come straight from a known illicit source. Indirect exposure covers funds that pass through one or more intermediary wallets before reaching a platform.

    Chainalysis said direct monitoring has become more uniform across regions. The gap sits in indirect monitoring, where alert thresholds can be much higher. For ransomware, fraud shops, scams, darknet markets, and sanctioned jurisdictions, indirect thresholds often sit 10 to 20 times above direct thresholds.

    Banks still use lower alert thresholds

    Chainalysis also found that traditional financial institutions keep tighter alerting floors than crypto exchanges. For indirect exposure to non-illicit flows, the firm said crypto exchanges set average alerting minimums at $950, compared with $150 for traditional financial institutions.

    The gap narrows for illicit flows, but banks still run stricter settings. Chainalysis said crypto exchanges set alerts for illicit flows from $100, while financial institutions set the floor at $55. That difference matters as more banks test stablecoins, tokenized assets, and crypto custody.

    Compliance pressure grows across crypto markets

    The report fits a wider compliance push across the digital asset market. As previously reported by crypto.news, Polymarket tapped Chainalysis in April to monitor insider trading and manipulation across its prediction markets after volumes reached more than $7 billion monthly.

    Separate crypto.news coverage also showed rising pressure around cross-chain AML gaps, Binance monitoring duties, stablecoin controls, and North Korean hacking activity. Chainalysis reported that North Korean-linked actors stole more than $2 billion in crypto in 2025, adding urgency to stronger fund-flow monitoring systems.





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