For weeks, the Iran drama has been the top excuse Bitcoin used to pretend it wanted a rally but kept ghosting us.
Now the same soap opera handed Bitcoin one of the quirkiest demand signals in crypto history.
Iran announced oil tankers passing through the Strait of Hormuz must pay a toll in Bitcoin. The tariff is set at $1 per barrel, with the largest tankers carrying up to 3 million barrels-meaning a single passage could be a $3 million Bitcoin bill. Empty tankers pass for free. Everyone else pays in BTC, within seconds of receiving Iranian approval.
“Once the email arrives and Iran finishes the ‘assessment,’ vessels are given a few seconds to pay in Bitcoin, ensuring they can’t be traced or confiscated due to sanctions,” said Hamid Hosseini, a spokesperson for Iran’s Oil, Gas and Petrochemical Products Exporters’ Union.
Why Iran Chose Bitcoin and Why It Actually Matters
The logic is simple, really: Bitcoin sidesteps dollar rails, is non-sovereign, and basically laughs at Western sanctions. It slots neatly into Iran’s $7.8 billion crypto ecosystem, which Chainalysis has flagged as increasingly central to moving money across borders.
This is not a small story. A sovereign government mandating Bitcoin as payment infrastructure for one of the world’s most strategically important shipping lanes – a route that carries roughly 20% of the globe’s oil supply – is, well, huge. And yes, it’s exactly the kind of plot twist that makes you check if your popcorn is still edible.
Martin Kelly, head of advisory at maritime intelligence group EOS Risk, notes the practical impact: under the new setup, only about 10 to 15 ships can pass daily-down from 135 before the war began. It’s like the DMV, but with more hulls and less patience.
Adding an extra layer of weird, President Trump told ABC News on Wednesday that he was weighing a US-Iran “joint venture” on the tolling system.
“It’s a way of securing it – also securing it from lots of other people. It’s a beautiful thing,” he said.
Bullish Signals Are Stacking
The toll announcement landed alongside two independent Bitcoin signals on the same day.
Michael Saylor, roundtable mastermind at MicroStrategy, told a Mizuho investor event that Bitcoin likely bottomed near $60,000 in early February when forced sellers were flushed out, with ETF inflows now doing the heavy lifting on daily supply.
Separately, Bitcoin’s net taker volume just hit its highest level since early February-a telltale sign that aggressive buyers are back from a well-deserved vacation.
Bitcoin surged above $72,000 after the ceasefire news dropped, and kept climbing as the toll gossip spread. The ceasefire is fragile and the toll system is still finding its feet. But for the first time since the chaos began, the same conflict that used to pressure Bitcoin is now generating direct, sanctions-proof demand. Groundbreaking stuff, if you like your news with a side of irony.
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2026-04-09 16:52