
Binance is offering relocation as a precautionary measure due to rising tensions from the Iran conflict in the Middle East.
Binance has not disclosed the exact number of employees who have chosen to remain in the UAE.
Binance assures that its operations will not be disrupted and is well-equipped to support remote work during this period of uncertainty.

Binance is offering temporary relocation options for its UAE-based employees due to rising tensions from the Iran conflict. The exchange assures that its operations will not be disrupted by these precautionary measures.
Binance is offering temporary relocation to employees based in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), as the Iran conflict rattles the wider Middle East.
Bloomberg reported today that the largest crypto centralized exchange (CEX) said many staff members have opted to stay in the UAE, though it did not disclose an exact number.
In an e-mail statement sent to Bloomberg this Friday, the CEX explains it gave its UAE employees the relocation option as a precaution measure. Binance assures the company is more than capable to support this type of scenarios without it interfering with the business.
Given the recent regional tensions, we offered employees the option to temporarily relocate as a precautionary, employee-first measure to provide flexibility and support during a period of uncertainty. As a remote-first organisation, we are well set up to support this kind of flexibility without disruption to our operations.
This measure follows last month’s recommendation from Binance to its UAE staff to limit outdoor activity and prioritize remote work as tensions rose.
On March 2025, Binance reported it had roughly 1,000 employees in the country, accounting for about 20% of its global headcount, Bloomberg claims.
At the ending of last year, Binance repositioned itself under Abu Dhabi Global Market oversight and moved its global platform under ADGM supervision, making the UAE its regulatory and operational anchor.
The CEX giant is under an ongoing compliance upheaval and Iran‑linked scrutiny since February this year. Binance fired five investigators after an internal probe into roughly $1 billion worth of USDT transactions tied to Iran.
According to The New York Times, users in Iran accessed more than 1,500 Binance accounts. In that period, around $1.7 billion moved from two Binance accounts to Iranian entities with alleged ties to terrorist organizations. This potentially breached international sanctions. A Binance contractor opereated one of those accounts.
The cuts were focused on investigators and compliance personnel who were reportedly responsible for missing red flags tied to these potential violations of U.S. sanctions on Iran. Such move marked a major internal compliance crackdown and a strong signal of enforcement within the company’s regulatory structure.
For global exchanges, jurisdictional arbitrage now includes war risk and sanctions optics.
No direct impact on trading has been reported yet. Operational disruptions or a drawn‑out conflict could dent sentiment around BNB and Gulf‑centric liquidity.

At the moment of writing, BTC trades for around $72k on the daily chart. Source: BTCUSD on Tradingview.
Cover image from Perplexity. BTCUSD chart from Tradingview.
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