Thailand has frozen more than 10,000 cryptocurrency accounts suspected of being used for money laundering and scam related transfers as regulators tighten oversight of the digital asset sector.
Thailand has taken a major step to curb financial crime in the cryptocurrency sector by freezing more than 10,000 accounts suspected of laundering illicit funds. The action comes after regulators and crypto platforms implemented stricter monitoring systems to detect suspicious activity.
Authorities say the crackdown is part of a broader effort to prevent scams, disrupt criminal networks, and strengthen trust in Thailand’s rapidly growing digital asset market.
The crackdown follows a coordinated effort between several major institutions in Thailand’s financial and law enforcement system. The initiative includes the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Thai Digital Asset Operators Trade Association, the Bank of Thailand, the Cyber Crime Investigation Bureau, the Central Investigation Bureau, the Anti-Money Laundering Office, and the Thai Bankers’ Association.
These agencies worked together to develop improved guidelines for identifying suspicious crypto accounts and stopping illicit transfers before funds move through multiple wallets.
Att Thongyai Asavanund, Chief Executive Officer of KuCoin Thailand and chairman of the Thai Digital Asset Operators Trade Association, said the stricter screening process helped operators identify and freeze more than 10,000 accounts suspected of acting as mule accounts used in money laundering schemes.
The Thai Digital Asset Operators Trade Association represents licensed digital asset businesses in the country, including cryptocurrency exchanges and brokerage platforms.
Authorities introduced a series of tighter compliance measures designed to identify suspicious behavior earlier and slow down high risk transactions.
Under the updated rules, digital asset operators now apply stricter Know Your Customer verification checks and enhanced transaction monitoring. These new systems flag accounts showing unusual transfer patterns or abnormal activity.
Additional safeguards include:
Suspicious transfers can now be blocked before completion, reducing the chances that illicit funds move through intermediary accounts.
According to regulators, these changes are designed to close loopholes that criminal groups have used to move funds through crypto platforms.
The recent freeze builds on earlier enforcement actions across Thailand’s financial system. In 2025 alone, authorities reportedly froze 47,692 crypto accounts linked to suspicious activity.
Regulators are also expanding oversight beyond digital assets. The government recently launched a wider campaign against so called gray money, targeting industries that may be vulnerable to money laundering including physical gold markets.
Another key regulatory tool is stricter enforcement of the Travel Rule. Under this requirement, licensed crypto service providers must collect and transmit identifying information about the sender and recipient of certain digital asset transactions. This applies especially to wallet to wallet transfers conducted through exchanges.
Officials say these rules improve transparency and make it harder for criminals to move funds anonymously through the crypto ecosystem.
Thailand has also embraced digital asset innovation while tightening safeguards. The country previously approved stablecoins such as USD Coin and Tether for use in regulated crypto exchanges and settlement systems.
Authorities believe that strengthening compliance standards will help support innovation while protecting the financial system from fraud.
In my experience covering crypto regulation, Thailand is taking a practical approach that many countries are still struggling to implement. Instead of restricting crypto innovation, regulators are focusing on stronger compliance and cooperation between exchanges, banks, and law enforcement.
I found the collaboration between regulators and industry groups particularly important. When exchanges and authorities share data and monitoring tools, it becomes much harder for criminal networks to exploit the system.
If these measures continue evolving, Thailand could become one of the most trusted crypto markets in Southeast Asia, where innovation grows alongside strong financial safeguards.
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