Growing interest in digital assets has begun spilling into Russia’s public pension system, shaping unexpected conversations with officials as cryptocurrency questions now rank among the most frequent non-standard inquiries received by the Social Fund of Russia.
During 2025, the state-run institution managed about 37 million calls through its helpline, most focused on pensions, benefits, and maternity capital, while crypto-related topics increasingly caught operators’ attention, according to Rossiyskaya Gazeta.
Rather than routine clarifications, callers repeatedly asked whether pensions could be paid in cryptocurrency and whether income from crypto mining could affect eligibility for social benefits. Officials responded with firm explanations, stressing that all pensions and social transfers are issued exclusively in rubles, while digital assets fall outside the fund’s authority.
Moreover, operators emphasized that cryptocurrency income does not factor into pension calculations and redirected tax-related questions to the Federal Tax Service, which oversees digital asset reporting and compliance. Consequently, the spike in crypto-related calls reflects broader financial curiosity rather than imminent policy shifts, with the fund noting that such inquiries appeared often enough to stand out from overall call volumes.
Beyond pension discussions, Russia’s wider crypto adoption continues accelerating, as Chainalysis reported that the country received $376.3 billion in cryptocurrency between July 2024 and June 2025.
That figure placed Russia ahead of the UK, which recorded $273.2 billion during the same period, while large transactions above $10 million surged 86% year over year. Institutional activity and expanding decentralized finance usage fueled this growth, pushing overall crypto inflows into Russia up 48% compared with the previous year.
Retail participation also expanded rapidly, with Chainalysis reporting stronger growth across both large and small retail segments than the European average. DeFi activity rose sharply as well, with early 2025 data showing an eightfold increase in decentralized finance engagement within Russia.
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Meanwhile, regulators have started outlining limited crypto access frameworks, as the Bank of Russia recently proposed allowing non-qualified investors to purchase select cryptocurrencies under strict conditions.
Under the proposal, retail investors could invest up to ₽300,000, equal to $3,834, after passing a mandatory knowledge test, while qualified investors would receive broader access excluding privacy-focused tokens.
However, these regulatory discussions do not extend to pensions or social payments, hence public expectations now run ahead of institutional mandates. Notably, pension-related crypto inquiries highlight a trust gap between citizens and traditional systems, as many callers appear eager to align long-term income with assets they already use daily.
Besides curiosity, these calls also reflect Russia’s evolving financial culture, where crypto no longer sits at the margins even as state systems remain firmly traditional. For now, the Social Fund maintains clear boundaries, as pensions stay ruble-based while digital assets remain regulated elsewhere.
Still, the growing volume of crypto-related questions signals shifting public priorities, and financial authorities may face increasing pressure to address these expectations more directly.
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