Ireland just put crypto firms on notice. The government unveiled a new National Risk Assessment on June 18 covering money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing, and for the first time, crypto-asset providers have been bumped up the risk ladder compared to the country’s previous 2019 assessment.
Alongside the risk assessment comes a 30-point action plan: tighter crypto safeguards, better inter-agency intelligence sharing, stricter anti-money laundering rules for gambling, and more transparency around company ownership.
What the plan actually says
The overall money-laundering threat level in Ireland remains classified as moderate. Terrorist financing and proliferation financing threats are both rated low. The concern is specifically that crypto has matured into a large enough financial channel to attract serious criminal interest.
The 30-point action plan targets several areas simultaneously. Enhanced safeguards for crypto-assets and digital finance sit near the top of the priority list. The plan also calls for stronger cooperation between the Central Bank of Ireland, An Garda Síochána, and Revenue, Ireland’s tax authority.
Tánaiste and Minister for Finance Simon Harris and Minister for Justice Jim O’Callaghan are both publicly backing the initiative.
The MiCA connection
Ireland isn’t operating in a vacuum. This action plan lands squarely in the context of the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, better known as MiCA, which Ireland is working to fully implement.
Under MiCA, the Central Bank of Ireland takes on supervisory authority over Crypto-Asset Service Providers, or CASPs. That role builds on the existing framework of Virtual Asset Service Provider registration requirements that Ireland already had in place.
Ireland has already shown it’s willing to use enforcement tools. In November 2025, Coinbase Europe Limited was hit with a significant fine by Irish regulators.
What this means for investors and the crypto industry
For legitimate crypto businesses operating in Ireland, the increased scrutiny cuts both ways. Higher compliance costs are coming: more reporting requirements, more transparency obligations, more touchpoints with regulators. For smaller firms and new entrants, those costs can be the difference between viability and shutting down.
For traders and retail investors, the immediate impact is likely minimal. These changes target the service providers, not the end users directly. But downstream effects, like potentially slower onboarding processes, more stringent identity verification, and tighter controls on fund movements, are the kind of friction that users will eventually feel.
Ireland rating its overall money-laundering threat as moderate while specifically calling out crypto providers as a growing concern is a deliberate choice. The 30-point plan isn’t a wish list. It’s a roadmap, and the agencies tasked with executing it already have recent enforcement experience to draw on.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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