Chainalysis has announced the launch of blockchain intelligence agents, a new class of AI-powered tools designed to assist users with cryptocurrency investigations and compliance tasks. The announcement was made at the Chainalysis Links conference in New York City on Tuesday. The company describes the agents as distinct from conventional language model-based AI tools, comparing their capabilities to those of an experienced analyst operating at machine speed.
The agents are expected to be introduced gradually over the summer, giving companies a way to expand their capacity to handle cryptocurrency-related challenges. Co-founder and CEO Jonathan Levin outlined the rationale in a post on the company’s blog, stating that the rollout would begin in areas where the technology can deliver the greatest impact. Levin emphasized that investigations and compliance were the natural starting points for deployment.
Levin also addressed the broader threat landscape driving the decision. He noted that as bad actors increasingly use AI to scale their own operations, it becomes essential for those working to counter them to adopt similar tools. The company framed the move as a necessary response to an evolving environment in which criminal activity is becoming more technologically sophisticated.
Chainalysis indicated it had already deployed the AI agents during early development phases for intelligence gathering and investigative work. This internal use provided the company with practical experience before a wider release. The phased approach is intended to allow organizations to integrate the technology into existing workflows without disruption.
The announcement follows a comparable move by rival firm TRM Labs, which launched its own AI investigative assistants the previous week. TRM Labs designed its tools to help users trace funds, conduct audits, and support investigations into crypto-related crimes. The back-to-back releases suggest growing momentum within the blockchain analytics industry toward AI-assisted investigative capabilities.
Earlier this year, Chainalysis published findings showing that ransomware attacks increased by 50% in 2025. Despite the rise in attack volume, payments linked to those incidents declined by 8% compared to 2024, falling from $892 million to $820 million. The data points to a complex picture in which attack frequency and financial impact do not necessarily move in the same direction.
Originally reported by CoinTelegraph.
