Reports that Iran may accept crypto for oil tanker tolls in the Strait of Hormuz have sparked debate across the digital asset market.
Summary
- Reports on Iran’s possible crypto tolls for oil tankers have split opinion across Bitcoin and stablecoin circles.
- Analysts said stablecoins face freeze risks, while Bitcoin supporters called BTC harder to block or control.
- Galaxy’s Alex Thorn said tanker payments may use Bitcoin addresses, not Lightning, due to size limits.
The discussion followed a Financial Times report that linked the proposal to Iran’s efforts to reduce exposure to US sanctions.
Market participants have focused on one question: whether Bitcoin would play a real role in such payments. Conflicting claims have since pointed to stablecoins or Chinese yuan as other possible options.
The latest debate started after reports said Iran was considering Bitcoin payments for ships crossing the Strait of Hormuz. The waterway remains one of the world’s busiest energy routes, which has pushed the topic beyond crypto circles and into wider market discussions.
Alex Thorn, head of firmwide research at Galaxy, said later reports did not fully support the original Bitcoin claim. He said some accounts suggested the tolls could instead be settled in stablecoins or Chinese yuan, which left the payment method unclear.
That uncertainty has driven much of the reaction from Bitcoin supporters and market analysts. With no confirmed payment framework in place, traders and industry figures have treated the story as a developing issue rather than a settled policy.
The lack of an official and detailed public plan from Iranian authorities has also kept room for doubt. For now, the crypto market is responding more to reports and commentary than to a final rule.
Bitcoin and stablecoins draw different arguments
Bitcoin supporters argued that BTC would be harder for outside parties to freeze or block. Justin Bechler said, “USDT and USDC include built-in blacklist functions at the smart contract level,” adding that issuers can freeze funds when addresses are flagged.
He also said, “Bitcoin has no issuer, no compliance officer to pressure, and no freeze function.” That argument has pushed some market participants to present Bitcoin as a more resilient option for cross-border settlement under sanctions pressure.
Still, that view has not settled the debate. Stablecoins remain widely used in global crypto payments because they reduce price swings, and that may still matter for any large commercial transaction tied to oil shipping.
The discussion also reflects the difference between theory and practice. A payment method may look strong on paper, but large state-linked payments depend on speed, scale, compliance risk, and operational ease.
Payment size and logistics remain key issues
Thorn estimated that tanker tolls could range from $200,000 to $2 million per ship. That size has raised doubts about whether the Lightning Network would be the main rail, even though some early reporting suggested a payment could be completed within seconds.
He said the more likely setup would involve Iran providing a QR code or a Bitcoin address after approving a ship’s passage. That method would avoid the limits that can affect very large Lightning payments.
Thorn also noted that the largest known Lightning transaction to date was about $1 million. That figure matters because some tanker tolls may sit above that level, which could make direct onchain settlement or pre-arranged transfers more practical.