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Russia just tightened the screws on illegal mining in russia with some pretty serious criminal penalties. If you're operating without proper registration, you're looking at fines up to 1.5 million rubles or forced labor. But here's where it gets heavy - if you're part of an organized group or making serious money from it, that can stretch to 5 years in prison.
The Russian Ministry of Justice pushed through amendments to the Criminal Code introducing Article 171.6, which specifically targets unregistered miners and anyone running unauthorized mining infrastructure. The law defines substantial income as anything over 13.5 million rubles and large-scale operations as exceeding 3.5 million rubles. For organized criminal groups involved in mining in russia, penalties include fines ranging from 500k to 2.5M rubles plus potential imprisonment.
What's interesting is this builds on the framework that came into effect last November when Russia actually legalized mining. By May 2025, over 1,000 miners had already registered with the Federal Tax Service. All legal operators now have to report their monthly mining activities through the FNS portal - basically the government wants full transparency on what's being mined.
Deputy PM Alexander Novak made it clear that 2026 is when they start cracking down on illegal miners and unlicensed lenders. The government's basically saying: if you want to operate, register and comply. Mining in russia is allowed, but only if you follow the rules. Meanwhile, they're keeping their ban on using Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies for everyday payments - that part hasn't changed.
So the message is pretty straightforward. The window for operating in gray zones is closing. Russia's building a regulated crypto mining sector, and if you're not on the FNS registry, enforcement is coming.