A recent Chainalysis report paints a detailed picture of how criminal funds have accumulated across public blockchains, exposing a growing pool of seizable assets worth over $75 billion.
Of this total, illicit entities directly control nearly $15 billion, while downstream wallets connected to their activity hold another $60 billion. The findings come as the United States establishes its Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR) and Digital Assets Stockpile (DAS), signaling plans to expand its digital capital through asset seizures.

According to Chainalysis, law enforcement has already confiscated $12.6 billion in illegal funds using its analytics tools. The study shifts focus from transaction flows to static on-chain balances, providing a clearer look at what remains unspent and therefore recoverable.
Interestingly, while scams and darknet markets process large transaction volumes, the largest on-chain balances belong to stolen fund operators who often delay liquidation. Chainalysis noted a sharp 359% surge in these illicit balances since 2020, driven partly by market appreciation, especially in Bitcoin and Ethereum.
In addition to the main criminal wallets, a gigantic second tier of addresses contains most of the criminal wealth. Downstream wallets store approximately $60 billion in cryptocurrencies, about four times as much as direct illicit ones.

Vendors and admins of darknets top the list, with more than $46.2 billion in on-chain value. Their early adoption of cryptocurrency, dating back to Silk Road, allowed years of appreciation.
Money laundering sites, such as Black U launderers, extend this underground network further by flushing pilfered monies through various transit hubs. According to Chainalysis, darknet and fraud-based wallet sets have increased by a compound annual rate of over 200%. Without regard to such enormity, enforcers still net assets by finding wallet concentrations and attacking soft spots of conversion.
Although Centralized exchanges are still the most used exit method, trends indicate that bad actors rapidly evolve. Criminilic inflows to exchanges were an average of $14 billion annually since 2020, but decreased in 2025 as bad actors more and more regard crypto as a store of value.

Direct payment of exchanges decreased from more than 40% in 2021 to about 15% in the year, with increased use of mixers and cross-chain bridges for concealing traces.
Law enforcement is running short on time to catch these funds. Deposit address reuse is shown by Chainalysis’ data to fall sharply, for higher turn-in of cash-out infrastructure. Bitcoin is still the longest-held asset by criminals, with 36.7% of the wallets still having a balance after one year.
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