Iranian protests 2025-2026
Widespread unrest erupted as thousands demand the removal of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Brutal response by security forces and human rights abuses.
➡️ DEADLY ANTI-REGIME PROTESTS IN IRAN 2025/26 - Under a Strangled Economy, Iranians Have Had Enough
Nationwide unrest erupted in Iran on December 28, 2025. Although the demonstrations have since eased, widespread discontent with the Islamic Republic government, its mishandling of the ongoing economic crisis, and its brutal stronghold on the country have continued to worsen.
These protests amount to the largest uprising since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Demonstrations have taken place in all 31 provinces across 186 cities. The Iranian government responded with deadly force, killing more than 6,000, injuring thousands more, and arresting more than 24,000. Instilling fear in Iranian civilians, many have now chosen to stay at home as the country reels from a 20-day government-enforced internet blackout.
The latest protests began after shopkeepers and merchants in Tehran closed their shops following the Rial's plummet to an all-time low. Soaring prices, the collapse of the currency, and economic growth of just 0.6% has made business and life in the country near impossible.
The situation escalated after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to take military action. For years, Iran has struggled under brutal repression, critical water shortages, power outages, unchecked air pollution, chronic corruption, and economic mismanagement.
Jump straight to our resources on the deadly ➡️ Protests in Iran
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Iran & Past Conflicts
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Israeli Attacks on Iran
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The Iranian Nuclear Programme & the Nuclear Deal
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U.S. & UN Sanctions
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Women's Rights (Or Lack Of) in Iran
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The Death Penalty
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Human Rights in Iran
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The Political Situation in Iran
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Information for Protesters in Iran
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Iran's Economic Meltdown
Iran is suffering its deepest and most prolonged economic crisis in modern times. In the last 8 years, the Iranian currency has fallen by 90%. In December 2025, one U.S. dollar was priced at 1.36 million Rial. Food prices have risen by 72% compared to the previous year. This dire situation is not new; it is a consequence of years of inaction, and the Iranian people are angry.
How can people survive if a tray of eggs is £9 and five kilos of cooking oil is £25?
Iran's economy is unrecognisable as war and sanctions have brought the country to a standstill. Iran is now one of the most heavily sanctioned countries in the world.
Timeline of significant sanctions on Iran:
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1979 – The first U.S. imposed sanctions after the seizure of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. Iranian imports are banned, and $12 billion in assets are frozen.
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1995 - President Bill Clinton prevents U.S. companies from investing in Iranian oil and gas, and from engaging in all forms of trade. In 1996, Congress passed a law requiring sanctions on foreign firms investing more than $20m a year in Iran's oil and gas sector. European protests postponed its implementation until 2010.
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2006 - The United Nations imposes sanctions on Iran's trade in nuclear energy-related goods. Individuals and companies with connections to it have their assets frozen. Over the following years, the U.S., the EU, and the UN continue to expand and tighten their sanctions.
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2015 - The U.S., the UK, China, France, Germany, Russia, and Iran sign the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. The agreement entails Iran curbing its nuclear program in exchange for a significant easing of sanctions.
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2018 – President Trump withdraws the U.S. from the nuclear treaty and reimposes all sanctions on Iran.
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2019 - Trump imposes new sanctions targeting petrochemicals and metals, as well as 12 Iranian officials.
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2020 - The U.S. assassinates Qassem Soleimani and imposes more sanctions on Iran.
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2025 – The U.S. launches strikes on Iranian nuclear sites in a 12-day war. UN sanctions were reimposed over Iran's nuclear programme.
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2026 – Almost all of Iran's oil revenue and overseas assets remain frozen.
When the Rial reached a new record low in December 2025, and at the height of the protests, the head of Iran's Central Bank resigned. He had been critical of the government's handling of the economic situation.
President Masoud Pezeshikian has appointed Abdolnasser Hemmati as the new bank governor. Hemmati previously held this position from 2018 to 2021. This is a questionable move, as during his brief stint as the country's Economy Minister, he was impeached in a no-confidence vote. The reason, for failing to tackle inflation and improve the value of the Rial, the very job expected of the Central Bank.
Deadly Crackdown by Authorities
On the recent protests, Ali Hosseini Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, said, "rioters must be put in their place." This gave the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) the green light to put an end to the protests by any means necessary.
Most international news organisations are barred from reporting inside Iran, but accounts from people who attended the protests reveal that protesters were shot at with live rounds indiscriminately. They even targeted those running away and even onlookers who were not involved. An alarming detail is that the IRGC specifically aimed at the protesters' faces and eyes.
In an attempt to crush dissent, shotguns, assault rifles, and handguns were used on the largely peaceful protests. Many of those injured did not seek medical attention for fear of being detained. The authorities have been refusing to hand over bodies to their families. Iranian security forces have a history of confiscating their victims' bodies and even forcing families to pay for the bullets used.
Donald Trump has threatened military action if the attacks on protesters continue, but has so far failed to intervene. Iran responded that it is open to negotiations. A few days later, however, Trump announced a 25% tariff on Iran's trade partners.
Iran is a theocratic republic which gives ultimate authority to their supreme religious leader. Exerting massive control over the country, the supreme leader also serves as commander-in-chief of the armed forces, sets general policy, controls the state media, appoints heads of the justice system, and leads key religious foundations. They hold a lifetime tenure.
The state is built on Shia Islamism, and the current regime has consolidated a mass of power. It is defended by a series of paramilitary forces, government-controlled courts, and death sentences against political dissidents.
The morality police enforce compulsory hijab laws, women's rights have been stripped back, the persecution of minorities, such as the Kurds, Baluchis, and Arabs, is commonplace, the internet is censored and restricted, social media platforms are blocked, and schools are strictly controlled by the state to promote ideological indoctrination.
"The violent repression of the Iranian people does not solve any of the country's problems. On the contrary, it creates conditions for further human rights violations, instability and bloodshed." - Volker Türk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
Is a Peaceful, Prosperous Iran Possible?
The widespread demonstrations in Iran, although started as an economic protest, are part of much broader political issues and anti-government sentiment. Protests saw university students marching alongside shopkeepers and merchants.
Iran now faces an unknown future.
International protests have now spread around the world as people unite and speakup for the people in Iran and the desperate need for reason, justice, and peace.
Iran is suffering from severe water scarcity, forcing internal migration and devastating rural communities. Decades of sanctions have left Iran crippled and isolated from the international community. Despite its wealth in oil and gas, due to failing infrastructure, civilians endure frequent energy shortages, leaving homes without heating in the winter months.
Change will come, but in what direction we can not be sure. Weak attempts at diplomacy have failed. The U.S. and Iran are both stubbornly uncompromising and looking to military action as a first option.
Iranian people dream of freedom and democracy whilst endlessly criticising the regime's authoritarian rule, even under the threat of death. The global community must step up to support the Iranian people and help them reclaim their future. Endless sanctions are not working and continue to punish innocent civilians.
Regime change in Iran would shake up the entire Middle East. Diplomacy would begin to stand a chance, Iranian influence would wane, conflicts would stabilise, and regional cooperation might even become the norm.
We must work to eliminate the nuclear threat in Iran and in all nuclear states.
"In the face of oppression, the courage to speak out becomes the beacon of hope." – Nasrin Sotoudeh, Iranian lawyer and human rights activist
Author: Rachael Mellor, 29.01.25 licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
For further reading on the 2025/26 Protests in Iran see below ⬇️
- 2025-2026 Iranian Protests - Wikipedia 504120
- Guardian: Iran 504220
- Google News 504203
- YouTube Search 504204
- Starlink - Wikipedia 504238
- 2025 Iran internal crisis - Wikipedia 504202
- 1 US Dollar = 999 Iranian Rial 504226
- USD to IRR Chart - Xe 504225
- Rights Watchdog Sounds Alarm over Arbitrary Arrests in Iran - OCCRP 24.02.26 509552
- Iranians caught between anger, fear and desire for change - DW 24.02.26 509529
- Iran’s government stresses ‘red lines’ as students protest in universities - Al Jazeera 24.02.26 509545
- Armed police flood Iran’s universities to crush student protests - Guardian 24.02.26 509546
- Video: Iran's Islamic Republic Faces Challenges Within the Country - WION 24.02.26 509543
- Video: Iran's regime caught between new protests and US military buildup - DW 23.02.26 509544
- ‘Our classrooms are empty because the graveyards are full’: Iran’s students on why they are protesting again - Guardian 23.02.26 509386
- Anti-government student protests spread to more Iranian universities - BBC 23.02.26 509550
- Iranian students rally as universities reopen after nationwide protests - Al Jazeera 22.02.26 509604
- University students hold new protests in Iran around memorials for those killed - NPR 22.02.26 509551
- Video: Iran students stage first large anti-government protests since deadly crackdown - BBC 22.02.26 509542
- Iran: Children among 30 people at risk of the death penalty amid expedited grossly unfair trials connected to uprising - Amnesty International 20.02.26 509288
- What the Current Crises Facing Iran Mean for Human Rights and Rules on the Use of Force - Just Security 20.02.26 509289
- Iran’s 40-day memorials for protesters spill beyond cemeteries into streets - Iran International 18.02.26 509287
- Students Searched, Phones Seized: Iran’s Protest Crackdown Reaches Classrooms - Iran Wire 18.02.26 509290
- 350,000 people march in Toronto in support of Iran protests - Pressenza 17.02.26 509226
- ‘Deliberate targeting of vital body parts’: X-rays taken after Iran protests expose extent of catastrophic injuries - Guardian 17.02.26 509062
- Iran's Protests Have Ended, but the Anger and Pain Haven't - NY Times 16.02.26 508910
- New photos give glimpse inside Iran’s bloody crackdown on anti-government protests - Guardian 15.02.26 508909
- Over a million people rally worldwide in solidarity with Iran protests - Iran International 14.02.26 508907
- Iran, US spar as diaspora organises rallies abroad calling for action - Al Jazeera 14.02.26 508908
- US says it caused dollar shortage to trigger Iran protests: What that means - Al Jazeera 13.02.26 509209
- Explainer: US says it caused dollar shortage to trigger Iran protests: What that means - Al Jazeera 13.02.26 508979
- How U.S. sanctions played into the protests in IRan - NPR 12.02.26 508977
- Don’t Bomb Iran - RCW 10.02.26 508681
- Anti-Khamenei slogans in Tehran on eve of revolution anniversary: social media footage - Al-Monitor 10.02.26 508555
- Iran pressures families of protest detainees to attend state-run rallies - Iran International 10.02.26 508553
- No protesters released as Tehran offers clemency to more than 2,100 convicts - Euronews 10.02.26 508554
- Iran arrests leading reformists close to the country’s president - Guardian 09.02.26 508552
- US-Iran talks are not a countdown to conflict - Conversation 09.02.26 508478
- Iran’s Despair Is U.S. Policy - TFF 06.02.26 508289
- Why Iran’s conscript army didn’t side with protesters - Good Authority 05.02.26 507979
- Lethal blackout - IPS 04.02.26 508795
- ‘Game is over’: Iran’s ex-leaders, hardliners clash after protest killings - Al Jazeera 03.02.26 508520
- There Is No Good Reason for the US to Attack Iran - CD 03.02.26 508350
- Witnesses describe violence, chaos during protests - DW 03.02.26 507475
- Appropriating the death count: Manufacturing consent for an attack on Iran - Al Jazeera 31.01.26 508064
- U.S. Military Tells Key Middle East Ally to Prepare for Attack on Iran - Dropsite 30.01.26 507218
- Video: Does Donald Trump have a coherent Iran strategy? - DW 30.01.26 507196
- Manufacturing Consent before the Bombs drop - Thomas Karat 30.01.26 507437
- Inside the challenges faced by journalists covering Iran’s protests - Conversation 29.01.26 508294
- How Iran shut down the internet and built a sophisticated system of digital control - Conversation 29.01.26 508293
- Iran Is Facing Its Deepest Crisis Since the 1979 Revolution - Jacobin 29.01.26 508085
- What could happen if the US strikes Iran? Here are seven scenarios - BBC 29.01.26 507050
- Iran seeks to avert US military action with talks in Ankara - Guardian 29.01.26 507055
- Iran Vows to ‘Respond Like Never Before’ as Trump Ramps Up War Threats - CD 28.01.26 507497
- Is the US preparing to strike Iran again? - BBC 28.01.26 506961
- Environmental crises add to Iran's mounting troubles - DW 28.01.26 506954
- Disappeared bodies, mass burials and ‘30,000 dead’: what is the truth of Iran’s death toll? - Guardian 27.01.26 506878
- 'We all know someone who was killed' - Iran protesters tell BBC of brutal crackdown - BBC 27.01.26 506868
- Video: US announces major military exercise as US aircraft carrier arrives in Middle East - DW 27.01.26 506886
- Video: What risks would the US run with an attack on Iran? - DW 27.01.26 507043
- Activists say at least 6,126 people killed in Iran’s crackdown on protests - Politico 26.01.26 507066
- Iran’s biggest centres of protest are also experiencing extreme pollution and water shortages - Conversation 26.01.26 508296
- Iranian government braces for possible attack as US navy arrives in region - Guardian 26.01.26 506635
- Over 36,500 killed in Iran's deadliest massacre, documents reveal - Iran International 25.01.26 506537
- How Iran Crushed a Citizen Uprising With Lethal Force - NY Times 25.01.26 506536
- ‘Emotionally devastating’: Iranians in US on regime’s deadly protest crackdown - Guardian 25.01.26 506538
- Iran Swings Between “Islamic Mercy” and Threats of Execution After January Protests - Iran Wire 25.01.26 506540
- UN rights body censures Iran's 'brutal repression' of protests - Reuters 25.01.26 506539
- Iran's Ayatollah Khamenei moves to underground bunker amid fears of US strike - JPOST 24.01.26 506494
- ‘Change is inevitable’: What is next for Iran? - Al Jazeera 24.01.26 506495
- Video: Tehran warn it will treat any US strike as an "all-out-war" - France24 24.01.26 506496
- Go East - IPS 23.01.26 506905
- Iran’s internet shutdown tells a larger story: Digital repression is on the rise - The Bulletin 22.01.26 507712
- A Massacre in Mashhad - NewYorker 22.01.26 509001
- This obsession has held Iran back for a half-century - Washington Post 22.01.26 506914
- Born in Evin Prison, Iranian Author on Protests Against “Authoritarian, Theocratic Regime” - DN! 22.01.26 506399
- Video: Notes from the Ground: Reflections on a Month That Shook Iran - Dropsite 22.01.26 506464
- Iran’s Supreme Leader Is Trapped - Project Syndicate 21.06.26 507224
- The US-Israeli Agenda in Iran - Dropsite 21.01.26 506137
- Why the gulf states are wary of a strike on Iran - DW 21.01.26 506163
- Iran seizes properties and businesses in crackdown after unrest - FT 21.01.26 505962
- I am in Iran watching the protests and desperate for change. But I don’t believe the regime will fall - Guardian 20.01.26 505963
- Why Iran’s crisis is Russia’s problem - IPS 20.01.26 506367
- Iran’s Protest Movement and Diaspora Politics - New Lines Magazine 20.01.26 505964
- Narrative war: Who killed thousands during Iran’s nationwide protests? - Al Jazeera 19.01.26 505965
- Iran cannot be bombed into democracy. But it can be helped to find its way there - Guardian 18.01.26 505476
- Thousands of Iranians have been killed protesting for their freedom. Why are so many silent on their plight? - Guardian 16.01.26 505275
- What next for Iran's Supreme Leader? - BBC 16.01.26 505270
- Exiled prince urges global support for Iranian people's fight for freedom - Iran Intl. 16.01.26 505108
- Iran’s protests: the regional and international responses - IISS 16.01.26 509117
- So much for a ‘final battle’ – once again the Iranian people’s peaceful and democratic demands have been silenced - Guardian 16.01.26 505107
- Video: Reza Pahlavi, is the last shah's son a viable opposition leader for Iran? - Guardian 16.01.26 505282
- Video: Who is Reza Pahlavi, the son of Iran's last shah? - BBC 16.01.26 505109
- Iran crisis explained: what we know so far - Guardian 15.01.26 504879
- You Might Not Like What Comes Next in Iran - Politico 15.01.26 506174
- One uprising, two stories: how each side is trying to frame the uprising in Iran - Conversation 15.01.26 506979
- How the Islamic Republic uses internet shutdowns as a tool of repression - Conversation 15.01.26 505946
- Iran’s Protesters Are Caught Between State Repression and Foreign Intervention - Truthout 15.01.26 505682
- 'Pahlavi will return': Nearly 50 years after the Shah fled, Iranians want his son back - JPOST 15.01.26 505110
- Rift at top of the Taliban: BBC reveals clash of wills behind internet shutdown - BBC 15.01.26 504898