Iran’s rial hits new low after economic crisis, unrest

January 28, 2026 07:00 | News

Iran’s currency has dropped to a record low, according to Iranian currency tracking websites, weeks after protests sparked by the rial’s dwindling value rocked the country.

The websites said the currency was worth 765,000 rials to the Australian dollar ​on Tuesday.

The ⁠rial has lost about five per cent of its value over the course of this month, according to data from the currency tracking website Bonbast.com.

Iran’s newly appointed Central Bank Governor Abdolnaser Hemmati said on Tuesday that “the foreign exchange market is following its natural course.”

What began as protests on December 28 over economic hardship in Tehran’s ‌Grand Bazaar quickly ​morphed into the worst legitimacy crisis for Iran’s clerical establishment as it spread across the country ‍with protesters demanding a political change.

Security forces crushed the unrest, which abated earlier this month, with the bloodiest crackdown since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Amid the protests, the government had introduced a subsidy reform, replacing preferential currency exchange rates for importers with direct transfers to Iranians to boost their purchasing power for essential goods.

Iran’s First ​Vice-President Mohammadreza Aref defended the policy on Monday, saying ‌corruption had made preferential rates ineffective in tackling inflation for basic goods, and that the new system aimed at stabilising the foreign ​exchange rate.

Monthly inflation for households has continued to rise, with year-on-year inflation reaching 60 per cent for the ‍period December 21 to January 19, according to figures released by the Statistical Centre of Iran on Sunday.

Meanwhile, Iran’s online economy has been battered by an internet blackout imposed since January 8 ​and ​still largely in place.

A government spokesperson said ​on Tuesday that while the government prefers free internet access, ​security considerations required maintaining restrictions.

Iranian authorities blamed the recent unrest on “armed terrorists and rioters” linked to Tehran’s foes, the United States and Israel.

US President Donald Trump repeatedly threatened Tehran with intervention, to which an Iranian official warned that any attack would be treated as an “all-out war.”

According to figures released on Tuesday by US-based rights group HRANA, the verified unrest-related death toll has reached 6126, including 214 security personnel.

Official figures have put the ‍death toll at 3117. Reuters was unable to independently verify the numbers.

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