Block, Inc. has agreed to a $40 million settlement with the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) for “significant failures” in its anti-money laundering compliance program, the Wall Street regulator announced on Thursday.
The company led by Jack Dorsey has agreed to retain an independent monitor after violating the Department’s money transmitter and virtual currency rules, the NYDFS added.
The NYDFS found that Block’s company had “inadequate customer due diligence” and failed to implement systems sufficient for preventing money laundering and illicit activity.
Block’s services were “vulnerable to criminal exploitation,” the NYDFS said, arguing that Block’s “lax treatment” of Bitcoin transactions allowed largely anonymous transactions to evade scrutiny.

Bitcoin, Ethereum Rise as Inflation Drops Sharply in March
The price of Bitcoin rose on Thursday after a closely watched inflation gauge in the U.S. showed consumer prices rose far less than expected last month. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 2.4% in the 12 months through March, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (CPI) said. Economists expected the index, which tracks price changes across a broad range of goods and services, to show a 2.6% annual increase. So-called core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, rose 2.8% in the 12 m...
“Compliance functions must keep pace with company growth or expansion,” NYDFS Superintendent Adrienne A. Harris said in a statement.
With its so-called BitLicense, Block’s Cash App had been regulated under the NYDFS as a virtual currency business since 2018.
Last year, Cash App ended its support for free peer-to-peer (P2P) Bitcoin payments, while leaning into other cryptocurrency services that users have gravitated toward.
A Block spokesperson told Decrypt that the firm is committed to promoting a safe and healthy financial system and has dedicated significant resources toward compliance."This marks the resolution of all previously pending state money transmission license matters," the spokesperson said. "Block did not admit to any of the findings in the document, and we are pleased to put this matter behind us."
In early Thursday trading, Block's share price was down 3.7%, according to Yahoo Finance data. It is off 36% year-to-date.
Edited by James Rubin