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A change that doesn’t quite fit the narrative most Western analysts have been telling about Bitcoin has been occurring somewhere between the glassy financial districts of Dubai and Istanbul’s currency exchange windows. One of the biggest institutional adoption stories of the decade may be coming from the Middle East, which is frequently left out of crypto coverage. At the very least, the numbers suggest that.
By a wide margin, Turkey is at the top of the regional index. The nation transacts about $200 billion a year, nearly four times as much as the UAE. The small kiosks with handwritten exchange rates, the lira changers, and the gold vendors are still present in Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar. However, something more subdued is taking place on phones and laptops behind that well-known scene. Gold purchases are no longer solely made for hedging purposes. They are purchasing anything that doesn’t lose value while they sleep, including stablecoins and Bitcoin.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Region Covered | Middle East & North Africa (MENA) |
| Leading Market | Türkiye — top of the regional adoption index |
| Türkiye Crypto Inflows (mid-2025) | Approximately $878 billion cumulative since 2021 |
| UAE Annual Transaction Value | $53 billion — the second-largest market in MENA |
| Israel Annual Transaction Value | $22 billion |
| Iran’s Status | Active despite sanctions, increasingly self-contained ecosystem |
| Recent BTC Price Milestone | Past $73,000 amid geopolitical tension |
| US Spot Bitcoin ETF Inflows (one week) | $586 million |
| Major Institutional Player | BlackRock via IBIT and similar products |
| Regulatory Framework | Türkiye’s 2024 framework, aligned with FATF standards |
| Tracked Behavior | Institutional resilience alongside retail contraction |
There’s a feeling that the lira’s problems have accomplished what years of cryptocurrency exchange marketing campaigns were unable to. Turks are turning to digital assets on an institutional scale that is uncommon in emerging markets due to inflation, currency devaluation, and a general disenchantment with traditional savings. By mid-2025, gross inflows had reached about $878 billion. For a nation still struggling with double-digit inflation and a depreciating currency, that is an astounding number.
However, the picture isn’t entirely optimistic. A more complex picture emerges when the year-over-year data is broken down. The players who move more than a million dollars at a time, known as institutional players, have stayed largely stable. Conversely, retail is shrinking.

Growth for professional traders fell from 41.6% to just 4.1%. In fact, small-scale retail transactions decreased. It’s startling, almost paradoxical, since every aspect of Turkey’s economic climate ought to encourage regular people to use cryptocurrency rather than discourage them.
Perhaps the problem is affordability. Perhaps it’s the new regulatory framework for 2024, which has stricter restrictions on withdrawals and margin products as well as more stringent KYC requirements. Perhaps it’s something more sentimental, such as a quiet disillusionment or losses from past speculative ventures. As this develops, it’s difficult to ignore the gap that is emerging: big players continue to view Bitcoin as a hedge, but regular investors appear to be getting more and more discouraged from doing the same.
The UAE has emerged as the sophisticated, regulation-friendly counterweight to Turkey. Abu Dhabi’s licensing system, Dubai’s free zones, and sovereign wealth managers’ apparent ease with digital assets all point to a calculated approach. Iran continues to run its own parallel crypto economy, shaped almost entirely by necessity and sanctions, while Israel’s volumes have drastically changed in the wake of its recent geopolitical upheaval.
The larger macro story is what connects all of this. Bitcoin surpassed $73,000 as gold fell below $5,100 and stock markets faltered. In just one week, $586 million was invested in US spot Bitcoin ETFs. The flow data appears to support BlackRock’s Robert Mitchnick’s description of this as long-term accumulation rather than speculation. Instead of viewing Bitcoin as a risk-on wager, investors—many of whom are based in the Gulf or route money through it—are increasingly viewing it as a hedge against monetary devaluation.
Whether this institutional momentum can withstand a more severe geopolitical shock or a significant regulatory crackdown is still up in the air. However, for the time being, there appears to be a subtle shift in the financial DNA of the area. It seems that the grandchildren of the petrodollar might not be totally devoted to oil.









