In the past week or so, Russia's Ministry of Finance has made two statements about the same group of assets.
First, it said that these foreign digital currencies were high-risk and "unfriendly," and would incur additional fees.
Less than a week later, it said these foreign digital currencies could be integrated into the legal trading system.
At first glance, it appears to be a reversal of stance, but it is actually two aspects of the same regulatory framework—raising the cost of using risky assets while formally bringing some assets into the scope of legal transactions. Russia's long-standing position on crypto assets has never been "prohibition," but rather "non-prohibition with strict restrictions and regulation." These two statements are merely two pieces of the puzzle disclosed sequentially in the same direction.
To use an analogy, it is somewhat like how customs handles foreign cash: cash can be brought in, but it must be declared, taxed, and can be frozen at any time if problems are found—the entire article below will use this analogy to explain.
To put it simply, the issue has never been "whether it is allowed," but rather "at what price it is allowed."
First, set a model: Customs, Foreign Cash, and Interceptors
To distill the entire matter, just remember three roles:
Russia: Plays the role of customs—deciding who can enter, how much must be paid to enter, and when it has the right to freeze assets.
USDT, USDC, etc.: Play the role of "foreign digital cash," which technically has the ability to freeze user wallet assets at the request of a judicial authority.
The European Union: Plays the role of "standing outside customs, trying to cut off this flow of money."
Remember these three roles. The timeline below is essentially these three parties each taking a step forward.
Step One: First, identify the "higher-risk" portion and increase the price
Russia has been building a regulatory framework over the past year, with the core question being: Can ordinary people legally buy and sell cryptocurrencies, which ones can they buy, and how much? In the draft finalized at the end of last year, the annual limit for ordinary investors to buy cryptocurrencies through a single platform was capped at approximately 300,000 rubles (around $4,000, with fluctuations due to exchange rates). In April this year, the bill for this framework passed its first reading in the legislature with a high vote, establishing a licensing system and regulatory authority, but left a loophole—allowing cross-border cryptocurrency settlements. This loophole would later become crucial.
In early June, Russia's Ministry of Finance issued a warning: The issuing companies of these "foreign digital cash" have the technical capability to cooperate with foreign regulators to freeze funds, and there have already been cases of freezing.
Shortly after, at an important economic forum in St. Petersburg, Russian officials formally announced: A special fee would be levied on these assets classified as "unfriendly," including USDT, USDC, and BNB, which could be as high as 3% of the transaction amount. For ordinary "unfriendly assets," the fee ranges from 0.5% to 2%, but these three were singled out for the maximum rate. The reason was straightforward—distrust in who these issuing companies listen to.
This is equivalent to customs announcing: This type of money carries a higher risk level and will be accounted for separately.
Step Two: Simultaneously, formally include it in the legal list
But customs cannot realistically keep these out—Russia's domestic daily cryptocurrency trading volume is approximately $700 million. With such a large market, truly banning it would only drive the money underground or overseas, and Russia would collect no taxes at all.
So, less than a week later, Russia's Ministry of Finance added the other half: USDC would be listed alongside Bitcoin, Ethereum, and USDT in the "regulated list"—meaning the list of assets that ordinary investors will be allowed to legally buy and sell in the future. The reason given was equally straightforward: These are assets used worldwide and are unavoidable, so it is better to bring them into the fold and regulate them.
In customs terms, this is equivalent to customs adding: Alright, it can be brought in, but it must be registered and fees must be paid.
When these two statements are viewed together, it forms a complete process of "tiered inclusion": Russia is not trying to ban these foreign digital currencies, but rather to place them within its own toll booth—they can enter, but the higher-risk portion must pay more.
Step Three: Russia also wants to separate "friends" from "foes"
Just charging fees is not enough; Russia also wants to do one more thing—steer people toward "money issued by friends."
Russian officials mentioned that smaller digital currencies pegged to the ruble or the UAE dirham might not be subject to the high toll fees in the future and could be approved more easily. The countries behind these currencies are relatively friendly with Russia and are theoretically less likely to cooperate with the West in freezing funds.
So, the complete logical chain is actually: "Digital cash" deemed "higher-risk and potentially freezable" (USDT / USDC / BNB)—allow it in, but levy heavy taxes; "Digital cash" from friendly countries (pegged to the ruble or dirham)—allow it in, levy little or no tax, because its issuer is less likely to cooperate with external freezes. This is a design that uses price to vote on "trustworthiness."
Looking deeper, if this "up to 3% handling fee" is understood merely as a tax, its true function is underestimated. A more accurate description is: This is a risk-pricing mechanism—using the level of fees to translate the question of "how safe is this money" into a directly comparable number. The higher the cost, the more discouraged its use; the lower the cost, the more encouraged its flow. Here, price is not just a market behavior; it is itself a screening tool in the hands of regulators.
For ordinary investors, the currently disclosed rule is: Retail investors without "qualified investor" status will only be allowed to buy and sell Bitcoin, Ethereum, and USDT in the future. Although USDC is on the "regulated list," whether it can be purchased or whether the additional handling fee applies has not been fully unified among various statements and will only be confirmed once the law is finalized.
Step Four: Customs is in a hurry because the outside is tightening
Russia's rush to finalize these "toll booth" rules before July 1 is not without reason—the external opening is being tightened simultaneously, and the window of opportunity for Russia is narrowing.
Shortly after Russia announced the fee, the European Union, in its 21st round of sanctions draft against Russia, for the first time proposed upgrading cryptocurrency sanctions from "naming platforms" to "service-level restrictions" and plans to introduce a potential ban mechanism targeting crypto asset service providers in third countries.
This means the logic of sanctions is shifting from "blocking specific exchanges" to "restricting the accessibility of the entire cross-border crypto service network."
This draft sanctions round named over a dozen crypto platforms to be banned from transactions, on the grounds that they were deemed to assist Russia in circumventing international sanctions; it also planned to target dozens of Russian banks. Almost simultaneously, U.S. President Trump publicly stated that stricter sanctions against Russia would be implemented soon.
This is the key: What the EU wants to cut off is precisely the "cross-border settlement" loophole that Russia deliberately left in its April bill—this loophole was originally an important channel for Russia to bypass the Western financial system and continue cross-border business. The tighter the external sanctions pressure, the more Russia needs to quickly establish its domestic cryptocurrency regulatory framework, create a self-contained loop, reduce reliance on dollar-system assets like USDT and USDC, and steer funds toward tracks it can control (ruble stablecoins, friendly-country currency stablecoins).
In other words, Russia's rush to legislate before July 1, even synchronously passing the supporting tax bill in its first reading, is not merely a domestic regulatory schedule. It is more like a race against time in the context of accelerating external封锁, to "pave the way for a fallback before being completely cut off." Cryptocurrency itself is no longer just an investment category; it is becoming a key variable in whether Russia can maintain external financial channels.
The Real Variable
When USDC is included in a national regulatory list while simultaneously being potentially freezable under another judicial system, its nature is no longer pure.
It is both a financial instrument and an institutional interface.
And what Russia is doing is attempting to find a controllable position for itself within this new interface system.
The future question may no longer be "whether crypto is accepted," but rather: Whoever defines the rules for crypto assets will control the new financial channels.
*The content of this article is for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice. The market carries risks, and investment requires caution.





