
Chainalysis announced at its Chainalysis Links conference in New York City on Tuesday that it plans to roll out “Blockchain Intelligence Agents” this summer in phases, for two core application scenarios: investigation and compliance. This announcement marks the next stage in AI-versus-AI for combating crypto crime.
In the announcement, Chainalysis specifically emphasized that Blockchain Intelligence Agents differ fundamentally from typical AI tools based on language models. The company positions them as “experienced analysts who work at machine speed.”
This positioning points to the key limitations of today’s language models: conventional AI assistants are strong at text generation and Q&A, but they fall short in scenarios that require real-time queries of on-chain data, tracking cross-platform transaction paths, and integrating information from multiple sources. Chainalysis’s design goal is to enable agents to proactively carry out a complete investigation workflow, rather than simply respond to query prompts.
Chainalysis said the company has long been using AI agents internally in the early development stage for investigations and intelligence gathering, and this announcement is a milestone in officially commercializing that capability to the market.
The commercialization roadmap for Blockchain Intelligence Agents clearly targets two of the most impact-heavy business scenarios:
Investigation use case: Helps law enforcement agencies and analysts track flows of suspicious funds, identify links between illegal addresses, and carry out complex tasks that typically take senior analysts hours to complete
Compliance use case: Helps exchanges and financial institutions automate customer risk screening, monitor unusual transaction patterns, and generate compliance reports that can be used for audits
Scaling for enterprises: Lowers labor costs for investigations and compliance tasks through AI agents, allowing resource-constrained mid-sized companies to meet compliance coverage standards comparable to large institutions
In a company blog post, Leven said the agents will be rolled out “in a phased manner,” starting with “the areas where they can have the greatest impact,” and then expanding into other business scenarios.
Chainalysis’s AI transformation is not an isolated event, but a signal of a broader systemic shift across the on-chain analytics industry. A week before Chainalysis made its announcement, competitor TRM Labs had already released an AI investigation assistant that enables users to track funds, perform audits, and investigate crimes related to cryptocurrencies. The two companies’ rapid moves show that AI capabilities have become a core competitive dimension in the industry.
Key background data: Chainalysis’s earlier report said that the number of ransomware attacks in 2025 increased by 50% compared with 2024, but the total amount of ransom payments in the same year actually fell by 8%, from $892 million to $820 million. The phenomenon of “more attacks but fewer payments,” which is partly attributed to improvements in investigation tools and law enforcement capabilities, also underscores the market’s continued demand for growth for Chainalysis.
Blockchain Intelligence Agents are designed to proactively execute a complete investigation and analysis workflow, not merely answer text questions. They can query blockchain data in real time, track cross-platform transaction paths, identify address linkages, and generate actionable intelligence reports—making them more like “analysts” with reasoning and decision-making capabilities than just Q&A tools.
Investigation and compliance are currently the business areas with the highest demands on analysis efficiency and the greatest human cost, and they are also the most prominent scenarios where Chainalysis’s existing advantages in on-chain data are strongest. In these two scenarios, AI agents can deliver the most direct and measurable efficiency gains, making it the best entry point to validate the business model and quickly build user trust.
An increase in attack volume means law enforcement agencies and companies need to handle a significantly higher volume of suspicious transactions, and manual analysis can no longer keep up with the pace. AI agents can process large numbers of cases at machine speed, matching the rise in investigative efficiency with the growth in attack scale. This is the core market logic behind Chainalysis choosing to roll out agents at this time.