Executive Summary and Exchange Overview
| Service type | Custodial peer-to-peer (P2P) cryptoasset marketplace with escrow, hosted wallet, and Telegram-coordinated trading; ruble-to-crypto on/off ramp |
| Legal entity | BITPAPA IC FZC LLC Confirmed [OFAC SDN; UK FCDO] |
| Aliases / branding | Bitpapa; marketed as a "worldwide peer-to-peer cryptocurrency exchange" and "cryptobank" with escrow protection |
| Entity registration jurisdiction | United Arab Emirates: A-0059-652 Flamingo Villas, Ajman Media City Free Zone, Ajman (Reg. No. 5069); established 29 Apr 2022 Confirmed |
| Infrastructure hosting jurisdiction | Not publicly mapped. Primary domains bitpapa.com, bitpapa.org. Customer base anchored in Russia Credible (Russia focus); Unknown (specific hosting) |
| Assessed operator location | Unknown. No named operators; an informed hypothesis places controllers in Russia or the UAE, but this is inference, not evidenced Analyst Inference |
| Operational period | Entity established Apr 2022; active through three designation cycles; operational as of June 2026 |
| Volume (total) | No total throughput figure published by any vendor. Elliptic reports concentration metrics, not totals: 9.7% of outgoing flow to OFAC-sanctioned targets, 5% to Garantex (Feb 2026). Do not present as total volume Confirmed (metric); Single Source (Elliptic) |
| Geographic footprint | Primarily targets users in Russia, allowing rubles to be exchanged for cryptoassets; nominal UAE registration; Russia/CIS-centric user base |
| OFAC designation | Entity designated 25 Mar 2024, E.O. 14024, program RUSSIA-EO14024; secondary sanctions risk noted; SDN id 48096 Confirmed |
| Ukraine designation | NSDC sanctions, presidential decree 6 Jul 2025 (package of ~60 legal entities) Confirmed |
| UK designation | Designated 26 May 2026, Russia (Sanctions) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019, category "supporting the Russian financial sector"; asset freeze Confirmed [UK FCDO] |
| EU designation | Not individually listed as of June 2026; EU 21st sanctions package (proposed 9 Jun 2026) includes crypto-platform transaction bans, adoption pending Credible |
| State nexus tier | TOLERATED SAFE HARBOR; no PROBABLE COOPERATION or DIRECT CONTROL evidence |
| Status | Sanctioned (OFAC, Ukraine, UK); operational; no rebrand observed |
| Blockchain analytics coverage | Elliptic (entity-specific, Feb 2026); TRM Labs (designation analysis; April 2026 deposit-wallet heuristic); Chainalysis (March 2024 designation coverage) |
Lineage and Organizational Heritage
No Predecessor Rebrand; Network Membership, Not Inheritance
Evidentiary Pillars
| Pillar | Evidence | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| No corporate predecessor | No source identifies a prior brand that Bitpapa rebranded from. The entity BITPAPA IC FZC LLC was established 29 Apr 2022 in the UAE with no documented predecessor registration. | CONFIRMED OFAC SDN (establishment date); negative evidence |
| Wallet-cluster continuity via rotation | Elliptic reports Bitpapa "constantly rotating addresses" to defeat attribution. TRM (April 2026) released a new deposit-wallet heuristic for Bitpapa, indicating a stable underlying cluster despite address rotation, a continuity signal at the infrastructure (not brand) level. | CONFIRMED Elliptic; TRM |
| No shared codebase / white-label evidence | No open report states Bitpapa runs a shared or white-labeled codebase with other Russian P2P services. Software-level lineage is unknown. | UNKNOWN Negative evidence; investigative gap |
Operator Profiles
Disputed Assessments
Analyst Inference The only defensible operator-level inference is geographic: given Russia-focused operations and a UAE shell registration, controllers are plausibly located in Russia or the UAE. This is a hypothesis, not a finding, and is not supported by any named-individual evidence. [Analyst assessment]
Service Model and Business Operations
Exchange Mechanics and Product Set
Confirmed Bitpapa operates a custodial P2P marketplace with escrow. Per TRM, it functions "as a typical cryptocurrency exchange, which offers custody solutions and hosts its own peer-to-peer marketplace." Self-presentation (2022) describes escrow mechanics: Bitpapa "ensures that the transaction is completed by holding the purchaser's coins in an account until the transaction is complete," with 24/7 availability. Trades are frequently coordinated through Telegram bots. [TRM, Line A Geek, AML Network]
Credible Supported assets reported in 2026 reviews include Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDT, Monero, and TON, consistent with the USDT-centric Russia evasion ecosystem. Activity appears focused on spot P2P and custodial transfers; no leveraged-derivatives product is documented. [TradersUnion, Bitget review]
KYC/AML Posture: Stated Policy vs Observed Behavior
Observed behavior (sourced to vendor/government framing, not the exchange's claims): Elliptic reports Bitpapa "manages its wallets specifically to evade sanctions enforcement by constantly rotating addresses," designed to prevent monitoring systems from identifying Bitpapa as a counterparty and to hide the Russian origin of funds. OFAC designated the entity for transacting with Hydra Market and Garantex. TRM previously labeled it a high-risk exchange. The gap between an undocumented stated posture and observed obfuscation plus large flows to sanctioned counterparties is the primary analytical finding. Confirmed [Elliptic, OFAC, TRM]
Fiat Rails (Schema Rule: Must Be Addressed)
Credible Bitpapa is a ruble-to-crypto on/off ramp: Elliptic notes it allows "rubles to be exchanged for a range of cryptoassets," which in the Russia/CIS context typically involves local bank-card transfers, cash deals, and domestic payment systems intermediated through its P2P book. [Elliptic]
Banking relationships: No specific bank or payment-processor relationship is documented for Bitpapa in primary sources. Single Source Correction to the source draft: the Sberbank and Alfa-Bank linkage attributed to Bitpapa in the AML Network write-up maps, in the primary OFAC record (jy2204), to NetEx24 (TOEP), which "enabled digital payments in rubles and virtual currencies to OFAC-designated entities such as Sberbank, Alfa-Bank, and Hydra Market." That ruble-rail tie should be assigned to NetEx24, not Bitpapa, absent independent Bitpapa-specific evidence. No documented de-risking or bank-termination events appear in open sources. This subsection is included per schema even though no named Bitpapa bank relationship is documented. Confirmed (the correction); [OFAC jy2204, AML Network]
Licensing and Regulatory Standing
Confirmed BITPAPA IC FZC LLC is an Ajman Media City Free Zone entity (Reg. 5069), established 29 Apr 2022. No UAE Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) license number or named regulator approval is cited in any source; the UAE registration reads as a free-zone shell for a Russia-centric operation rather than evidence of substantive licensed supervision. Inclusion on the OFAC SDN list, the Ukrainian NSDC list, and the UK Consolidated List indicates the platform holds no reputable Western-aligned licensing. [OFAC SDN, UK FCDO]
Technical Infrastructure and Platform Footprint
Domains and Brand Footprint
Confirmed The OFAC SDN entry lists two associated websites: bitpapa.com and bitpapa.org. Earlier promotional content referenced bitpapa.com/buy. AML-oriented profiles treat Bitpapa as a single brand; no large set of alternate domains or typosquat rebrands beyond .com/.org is evidenced. [OFAC SDN, Line A Geek]
Client Platforms, Apps, and Bots
Credible 2026 reviews describe access via iOS and Android apps, a Telegram bot, and a web interface under a single account. Non-technical explainers describe Bitpapa as a "program" or "app" available 24/7. No Google Play or App Store takedown is referenced in sanctions-related coverage. [TradersUnion, Bitget review, Line A Geek]
Credible AML Network reports that Bitpapa's anonymous trades are "often coordinated through Telegram bots," consistent with dedicated trade-coordination channels mirroring the web marketplace, a pattern common to Russian OTC/P2P networks. [AML Network]
Architecture Hints
Analyst Inference TRM's reference to a Bitpapa deposit-wallet heuristic implies a standard exchange model where individual deposit addresses forward into internal hot-wallet clusters. The constant address rotation Elliptic describes implies an internal wallet-management layer that separates user-facing deposit addresses from exchange hot wallets via intermediate hops. Whether Bitpapa runs its own blockchain nodes or uses third-party providers is not stated. [TRM, Elliptic]
Resilience After Disruption
Confirmed After the 2024 OFAC designation, Bitpapa continued operating; ForkLog and Elliptic describe it as sanctioned but active. No U.S. law-enforcement domain seizure or forced rebranding is reported. TRM's April 2026 deposit-wallet heuristic update confirms ongoing operation under the same brand. Resilience to date has focused on wallet-level stealth (address rotation) rather than overt brand change. [ForkLog, Elliptic, TRM]
Financial Intelligence and On-Chain Analysis
Overall Volume and Role
TRM Labs (May 2026): describes Bitpapa qualitatively as a high-risk P2P platform and does NOT publish a Bitpapa-specific bilateral dollar figure, even though it published such figures for co-designated peers (Huobi $4.9B, ABCeX $355M, Rapira $543M, Aifory $189M). The absence of a Bitpapa bilateral figure is itself a reporting gap, not a zero.
AML Network: "millions of dollars" in illicit transactions since 2022 (non-quantified, secondary).
No total throughput (licit plus illicit) figure exists in any reviewed source. These figures measure different things and are presented separately, not combined.
Phase 1: Receipt (Who Deposits and From Where)
Confirmed Inbound exposure includes darknet-market flows (Hydra Market), the sanctioned exchange Garantex, and ransomware-linked clusters, with Russia as the primary geography. OFAC: Bitpapa "conducted transactions worth millions of dollars with OFAC-designated Russian entities Hydra Market and Garantex." AML Network frames Bitpapa as "a critical conduit for laundering millions of dollars on behalf of notorious darknet markets and ransomware operators." Grounded in OFAC designation plus multiple vendor reports. [OFAC, AML Network, Elliptic]
Phase 2: Layering (Internal Mechanics, Obfuscation)
Confirmed Elliptic: Bitpapa is "constantly rotating addresses" to "prevent transaction monitoring systems from identifying Bitpapa as a counterparty and to hide the Russian origin of the funds from services that subsequently receive them." Combined with escrow flows between buyer and seller accounts and Telegram-coordinated P2P orders that separate fiat counterparties from crypto origin, this functions as an off-exchange layering mechanism. [Elliptic, AML Network]
Analyst Inference Single Source Cross-asset chain-hopping (between tokens or chains) is plausible given the USDT/BTC/ETH/TON/Monero support set but is not explicitly documented in the reviewed material. [Inference from supported-asset reporting]
Phase 3: Extraction (Where Funds Go)
Confirmed Outbound: Elliptic quantifies the dominant extraction signal, 9.7% of outgoing flow to OFAC-sanctioned targets and 5% to Garantex specifically. Credible Additional extraction via other Russia-linked exchanges and overseas OTC brokers for eventual fiat withdrawal is consistent with Elliptic's network framing but not separately quantified for Bitpapa. Domestic Russian banking cash-out is plausible but, per the Section 03 correction, the specific Sberbank/Alfa-Bank tie belongs to NetEx24, not Bitpapa. [Elliptic, OFAC]
Designated Addresses and Risk Status
Confirmed The OFAC SDN entry designates BITPAPA IC FZC LLC at the entity level under program RUSSIA-EO14024 with a secondary-sanctions-risk notation; the public Summary page does not enumerate specific designated crypto wallet addresses. TRM tracks Bitpapa as a distinct clustered entity (April 2026 deposit-wallet heuristic). The UAE registration jurisdiction is not on the FATF black or grey list; the relevant exposure is jurisdictional arbitrage, not host-country blacklisting. [OFAC SDN, TRM, FATF]
Client Profile and Criminal Use
Crimeware Verticals by Evidence Tier
| Vertical | Evidence | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| Darknet markets (Hydra) | OFAC: transactions worth millions with Hydra Market. AML Network: Bitpapa acts as an on/off ramp for Hydra. | CONFIRMED |
| Sanctioned exchanges (Garantex) | Elliptic: 5% of outbound flow to Garantex. OFAC: transactions with Garantex. | CONFIRMED |
| Sanctions-evasion / state-aligned ruble flows | OFAC, Ukraine, and UK all designate Bitpapa for facilitating Russia-linked sanctions evasion. | CONFIRMED |
| Ransomware operators | AML Network: laundering "millions" for ransomware operators aligned with Russian interests. No named ransomware family tied to Bitpapa as a specific cash-out venue in public reporting. | CREDIBLE Single Source |
| Retail fraud / withdrawal complaints | 2025 review video alleges withdrawal issues, delayed transactions, and "fake escrow" patterns, plus very low third-party trust scores. Anecdotal; not corroborated by formal LE action on retail fraud. | CREDIBLE Single Source |
Geographic Patterns
Confirmed Elliptic: Bitpapa "primarily targets users in Russia, allowing rubles to be exchanged for a range of cryptoassets." TRM: it offers "services to Russian nationals." The Russia/CIS core is clear; the UAE registration may facilitate some Middle East access, but no meaningful US/EU retail targeting is evidenced. [Elliptic, TRM]
High-Profile Flows
Confirmed (qualitative) Public materials cite "millions of dollars" with Hydra and Garantex but no case-by-case amounts tied to named criminal operations, and no DOJ indictment provides granular figures. This is a notable evidentiary gap relative to detailed BTC-e/WEX cases. The best-evidenced quantified signal remains Elliptic's 9.7%/5% outbound concentration. [OFAC, AML Network, Elliptic]
State Nexus Assessment
Jurisdictional Separation (Schema Rule: Three Jurisdictions)
| Jurisdiction type | Assessment | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Entity registration | United Arab Emirates: BITPAPA IC FZC LLC, Flamingo Villas, Ajman Media City Free Zone, Ajman (Reg. 5069), established 29 Apr 2022. | CONFIRMED |
| 2. Infrastructure hosting | Not publicly mapped. Domains bitpapa.com/.org; hosting provider and server location unknown. Customer base anchored in Russia. | UNKNOWN (specific hosting) / CREDIBLE (Russia-anchored users) |
| 3. Assessed operator location | Unknown. No named operators. Informed hypothesis: Russia or UAE. Explicitly stated as unresolved. | UNKNOWN |
State Nexus Tier: TOLERATED SAFE HARBOR
Why not Probable Cooperation: There is no evidence of state tasking, coordination, or active protection. No FSB, Rosfinmonitoring, or ministry link is documented; no procurement or defense-payment tasking is evidenced. Membership in the broader Russia-linked evasion ecosystem is network-level context, not direct tasking of Bitpapa.
Evidence against Direct Control: No open source identifies state ownership, named official involvement, or state shareholders.
Negative Evidence (What Would Be Expected if Higher Nexus Existed)
If Bitpapa were under PROBABLE COOPERATION or DIRECT CONTROL, one would expect documented state shareholding, named intelligence-officer involvement, procurement tasking, or explicit protection signaling. None of these are present. There is also no reported Russian government defense of Bitpapa, nor any domestic enforcement against it; the combination is most consistent with tolerated operation rather than active coordination. The assessment therefore stops at TOLERATED SAFE HARBOR. Analyst Inference
Law Enforcement and Regulatory Response
Sanctions
| Authority | Action | Status |
|---|---|---|
| OFAC (U.S.) | Designated BITPAPA IC FZC LLC on 25 Mar 2024 under E.O. 14024 (program RUSSIA-EO14024, press release JY2204; 13 entities and 2 individuals), for operating in the financial services sector of the Russian Federation economy and transacting millions with Hydra Market and Garantex. Secondary-sanctions-risk notation; websites bitpapa.com, bitpapa.org. Entity-level only; no individuals designated. | CONFIRMED (asset block in force) |
| Ukraine (NSDC) | Designated by presidential decree on 6 Jul 2025 within a package of roughly 60 legal entities targeting crypto-enabled sanctions circumvention and financing of the Russian military-industrial complex. | CONFIRMED |
| UK (FCDO / OFSI) | Designated 26 May 2026 under the Russia (Sanctions) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019, category "entities and individuals involved in supporting the Russian financial sector," within an 18-designation A7/crypto package (incl. Huobi/HTX, Exmo, Rapira, Aifory, ABCeX/Nueva Cryptologia). Asset freeze; UK-regulated firms prohibited from making funds or economic resources available. | CONFIRMED (asset freeze in force) |
| EU | Not individually listed as of June 2026. EU 21st sanctions package (proposed 9 Jun 2026) includes transaction bans on Russia-linked crypto platforms; adoption and entity-specific scope pending. | CREDIBLE (proposed, not adopted) |
| FinCEN | No Section 311 action or Bitpapa-specific advisory in open sources; grouped within broader Russia-evasion advisories. | CONFIRMED (negative evidence) |
| DOJ / criminal | No public DOJ indictment or criminal complaint names Bitpapa or its operators as of June 2026. | CONFIRMED (negative evidence) |
Timeline
Post-Sanction Reconstitution Assessment (Schema Rule)
Connected Entities and Ecosystem Relationships
Tier 2, Facilitation assessment: an analytical characterization of Bitpapa's role: Active facilitation, Structural enablement, or Incidental processing. The two tiers are independent and never collapsed.
| Entity | Tier 1: Transaction confidence | Tier 2: Facilitation | Vendor coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hydra Market Sanctioned darknet market (defunct since 2022) |
CONFIRMED OFAC: Bitpapa transacted millions with Hydra. AML Network: Bitpapa on/off ramp for Hydra. |
Structural enablement Deliberate KYC/AML deficiencies predictably enabled this at scale; no evidence of direct operator coordination. |
Corroborating: OFAC, TRM, AML Network. None disagreeing. |
| Garantex Sanctioned Russia-linked exchange (disrupted Mar 2025) |
CONFIRMED Elliptic: 5% of Bitpapa outgoing flow to Garantex (on-chain). OFAC: transactions with Garantex. |
Structural enablement Persistent, concentrated outbound exposure plus address rotation exceed incidental overlap; no evidence of joint operations. |
Corroborating: Elliptic, OFAC, TRM. None disagreeing. |
| NetEx24 / TOEP Co-designated Moscow fintech (OFAC 25 Mar 2024) |
ANALYST INFERENCE Co-designated in the same OFAC action; no public direct Bitpapa-to-NetEx24 on-chain flow figure. Relationship is ecosystemal, not evidenced as transactional. |
Structural enablement Parallel high-risk P2P/fintech behavior; no evidence of joint active facilitation. NetEx24 (not Bitpapa) carries the Sberbank/Alfa-Bank ruble-rail tie. |
Corroborating (co-designation only): OFAC. No on-chain vendor link published. |
| Russian banks (Sberbank, Alfa-Bank) Ruble fiat endpoints |
ANALYST INFERENCE (re-attributed) Primary OFAC record assigns the Sberbank/Alfa ruble-payment tie to NetEx24, not Bitpapa. The Bitpapa-specific bank linkage in AML Network is a likely conflation. Single Source for any Bitpapa-direct claim. |
Incidental processing From the banks' standpoint; no evidence of a knowing Bitpapa-bank arrangement. |
Disagreeing/primary: OFAC jy2204 (ties banks to NetEx24). Secondary: AML Network (attributes to Bitpapa). |
| Ransomware operators Unnamed Russia-aligned groups |
CREDIBLE AML Network: laundering "millions" for ransomware operators. No named family or on-chain case published. Single Source |
Structural enablement Weak controls predictably enable cash-out; no evidence of knowing per-actor coordination. |
Corroborating: AML Network only. No on-chain vendor has published a named case. Single Source |
| ABCeX, Rapira, Aifory Pro, NetEx24 (ecosystem) Russia-linked exchange network |
ANALYST INFERENCE Bitpapa is analyzed within the same Elliptic/UK network, but direct Bitpapa-to-peer bilateral figures are not published. Relationships are ecosystemal. |
Structural enablement Co-participant in the ruble-to-crypto evasion corridor; no evidence of coordinated operations with Bitpapa specifically. |
Corroborating (network-level): Elliptic, TRM, UK FCDO. No direct bilateral figures published. |
| Huobi / HTX UK-sanctioned global exchange (same package) |
ANALYST INFERENCE Co-designated 26 May 2026; TRM names Huobi as a persistent counterparty to the broader set, but no Bitpapa-specific Huobi bilateral is isolated. |
Structural enablement Large-exchange liquidity bridge for the network; Bitpapa-specific role unquantified. |
Corroborating: TRM (network-level). Huobi/HTX publicly disputes that the sanctioned entity equals its operating brand. |
Trajectory Assessment
Market Position and Volume Trends
Confirmed Bitpapa is a persistent node in Russia's P2P sanctions-evasion ecosystem, distinguished by an unusually high outbound concentration to sanctioned entities (9.7% overall, 5% to Garantex per Elliptic). It is one of the few services in the Elliptic/UK network sanctioned across multiple regimes. No total-volume trend line is published; the available signal is concentration, not throughput. [Elliptic, UK FCDO]
Disruption Impact
Reconstitution Status
Brand: Operational, no rebrand. Same entity, name, and domains across three designation cycles; accessible via web, app, and Telegram as of June 2026. Confirmed
Wallet layer: Adaptive. Constant address rotation; TRM expanding deposit-wallet attribution (Apr 2026). Confirmed [Elliptic, TRM]
Future risk: Continuity over reconstitution. With no seizure and no named operators, the service can persist indefinitely under the same brand; a future forced rebrand would most likely follow a domain seizure or app-store removal, neither of which has occurred. Credible
Intelligence Gaps
Recent Reporting
[26 May 2026] UK FCDO designates Bitpapa and 17 other entities/individuals (Huobi/HTX, Exmo, Rapira, Aifory, ABCeX/Nueva Cryptologia, Eurasian Savings Bank, A7 infrastructure) under the Russia (Sanctions) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019; TRM publishes accompanying analysis noting Bitpapa is now under a third national regime. [UK FCDO, TRM]
[Apr 2026] TRM releases a new deposit-wallet heuristic for Bitpapa, the sanctioned P2P marketplace, indicating ongoing activity and expanded attribution. [TRM]
[21 Feb 2026, updated 3 Mar 2026] Elliptic names Bitpapa in its Russia-linked sanctions-evasion report: 9.7% of outgoing flow to OFAC-sanctioned targets, 5% to Garantex, constant address rotation. [Elliptic]
[6 Jul 2025] Ukraine (NSDC) sanctions Bitpapa within a ~60-entity decree targeting crypto-enabled circumvention. [President of Ukraine]
[25 Mar 2024] OFAC designates Bitpapa (with NetEx24/TOEP and Bukanov) under E.O. 14024 for facilitating Russia-linked sanctions evasion involving Hydra Market and Garantex. [OFAC, Chainalysis, Elliptic]
Sources
- Elliptic: Russia-linked cryptocurrency services and sanctions evasion (Bitpapa: 9.7% outgoing to sanctioned, 5% to Garantex; address rotation) : 21 February 2026 (updated 3 March 2026)
- U.S. Treasury / OFAC: Treasury Designates Russian Companies Supporting Sanctions Evasion Through Virtual Asset Services and Technology Procurement (JY2204; Bitpapa, NetEx24/TOEP, Bukanov) : 25 March 2024
- OFAC Recent Actions: Russia-related and Cyber-related Designations (Bitpapa IC FZC LLC; SDN id 48096; RUSSIA-EO14024) : 25 March 2024
- UK Government: List of Russia sanctions designations, 26 May 2026 (BITPAPA IC FZC LLC, supporting the Russian financial sector)
- UK FCDO: UK cracks down on backdoor Russian sanctions evasion with tough new measures (18-designation A7/crypto package) : 26 May 2026
- TRM Labs: UK Designates Huobi, Exmo, Bitpapa, and 11 Other Entities for Russian Crypto Sanctions Evasion (Bitpapa under three regimes: OFAC 2024, Ukraine 2025, UK 2026) : 26 May 2026
- TRM Labs: US Treasury's OFAC sanctions Russia-based crypto exchanges and fintechs (Bitpapa custody + P2P; high-risk label) : March 2024
- TRM Labs: Blockchain Intelligence Releases, April 2026 (new deposit-wallet heuristic for Bitpapa)
- Chainalysis: OFAC Sanctions Netex24 and Bitpapa, Plus Other Russian Crypto Companies : March 2024
- President of Ukraine: NSDC sanctions decree (package including Bitpapa) : 6 July 2025
- AML Network: Bitpapa watchdog profile (weak AML/KYC; Telegram-coordinated trades; Hydra on/off ramp; note: Sberbank/Alfa attribution disputed, see OFAC jy2204)
- ForkLog: US Imposes Sanctions on Atomyze and Bitpapa Platforms : March 2024
- Virtual Routes: Cryptocurrency exchanges Bitpapa, TOEP, and Crypto Explore sanctioned (financial-services-sector designation language)
- OFAC Sanctions List Search: BITPAPA IC FZC LLC (entity detail; established 29 Apr 2022; Ajman Media City Free Zone; websites bitpapa.com, bitpapa.org)
- Traders Union: Bitpapa Review (April 2026) (continued operation; web/app/Telegram access; supported assets)
- Line A Geek: An In-Depth Guide to Bitpapa and Cryptocurrency (escrow self-presentation; 24/7) : 2022
Profile produced using open-source intelligence. Confidence labels applied per schema: CONFIRMED (multiple independent sources), CREDIBLE (single strong source or multiple weaker sources), ANALYST INFERENCE (logical extrapolation from confirmed facts). Volume figures cited with source and methodology; figures from different vendors and authorities are presented separately, not averaged. Two-tier connected entity model applied throughout Section 09 (Tier 1 transaction confidence plus Tier 2 facilitation assessment). Three jurisdictions documented separately per schema (registration UAE; hosting unknown; operator location unknown). Key correction vs. source draft: the Sberbank/Alfa-Bank ruble-rail tie belongs in the primary OFAC record to NetEx24 (TOEP), not Bitpapa. Status: Sanctioned (OFAC 25 Mar 2024; Ukraine 6 Jul 2025; UK 26 May 2026); operational; assessed state nexus TOLERATED SAFE HARBOR.