Chainalysis proposes standards for blockchain tracing in letter to FDIC

Chainalysis proposes standards for blockchain tracing in letter to FDIC

The blockchain analytics firm wants minimum benchmarks for clustering accuracy, entity coverage, and independent verification of tracing tools used by banks

Chainalysis, the blockchain analytics firm whose tools have helped freeze or recover over $34.3 billion in illicit funds, just told the FDIC what “good enough” should look like for crypto tracing technology.

In a comment letter submitted to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation on May 15, the firm laid out proposed minimum benchmarks for blockchain analytics tools used by banks and payment stablecoin issuers. The recommendations cover clustering accuracy, entity and chain coverage, data update frequency, and independent verification, essentially a quality scorecard for the software that financial institutions rely on to separate legitimate transactions from suspicious ones.

What Chainalysis is actually proposing

Chainalysis is pushing for methodology transparency, meaning analytics providers would need to show their work rather than just deliver results.

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The firm backs up its pitch with some specific numbers. Its clustering tools reportedly achieve true positive rates up to 94.85% with false positive rates below 0.15%. In US federal court proceedings, peer-reviewed research has demonstrated a false positive rate of approximately 0.01% for Chainalysis data.

The letter also highlights that Chainalysis currently covers more than 27 blockchains.

Why this matters right now

The FDIC has reportedly eased notification requirements for crypto-related activities, making it simpler for banks to engage with digital assets without triggering immediate regulatory alarm bells.

According to Chainalysis’s 2026 compliance benchmark report, nearly half of organizations now operate under stricter alerting standards.

The firm’s 2026 Crypto Crime Report also documents broader shifts in compliance methodologies across the industry.

The competitive angle investors should watch

Chainalysis is the largest blockchain analytics firm by market share, and any benchmarks modeled on its capabilities would naturally advantage its position. Competitors like Elliptic, TRM Labs, and Crystal Intelligence will be reading this letter very carefully.

The $34.3 billion figure in frozen or recovered illicit assets demonstrates that tracing technology works, and signals that attribution is improving and the tools are getting pressure-tested in actual courtrooms.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Chainalysis proposes standards for blockchain tracing in letter to FDIC

Chainalysis proposes standards for blockchain tracing in letter to FDIC

The blockchain analytics firm wants minimum benchmarks for clustering accuracy, entity coverage, and independent verification of tracing tools used by banks

Chainalysis, the blockchain analytics firm whose tools have helped freeze or recover over $34.3 billion in illicit funds, just told the FDIC what “good enough” should look like for crypto tracing technology.

In a comment letter submitted to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation on May 15, the firm laid out proposed minimum benchmarks for blockchain analytics tools used by banks and payment stablecoin issuers. The recommendations cover clustering accuracy, entity and chain coverage, data update frequency, and independent verification, essentially a quality scorecard for the software that financial institutions rely on to separate legitimate transactions from suspicious ones.

What Chainalysis is actually proposing

Chainalysis is pushing for methodology transparency, meaning analytics providers would need to show their work rather than just deliver results.

Advertisement

The firm backs up its pitch with some specific numbers. Its clustering tools reportedly achieve true positive rates up to 94.85% with false positive rates below 0.15%. In US federal court proceedings, peer-reviewed research has demonstrated a false positive rate of approximately 0.01% for Chainalysis data.

The letter also highlights that Chainalysis currently covers more than 27 blockchains.

Why this matters right now

The FDIC has reportedly eased notification requirements for crypto-related activities, making it simpler for banks to engage with digital assets without triggering immediate regulatory alarm bells.

According to Chainalysis’s 2026 compliance benchmark report, nearly half of organizations now operate under stricter alerting standards.

The firm’s 2026 Crypto Crime Report also documents broader shifts in compliance methodologies across the industry.

The competitive angle investors should watch

Chainalysis is the largest blockchain analytics firm by market share, and any benchmarks modeled on its capabilities would naturally advantage its position. Competitors like Elliptic, TRM Labs, and Crystal Intelligence will be reading this letter very carefully.

The $34.3 billion figure in frozen or recovered illicit assets demonstrates that tracing technology works, and signals that attribution is improving and the tools are getting pressure-tested in actual courtrooms.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.