Official sanctions records, corporate filings and land registry documents point to a vast financial network possibly tied to Iran's new supreme leader.
When Mojtaba Khamenei was named Iran's third supreme leader on 9 March, he inherited not only his father's title but a theological system built on the rejection of Western materialism.
The Islamic Republic's official creed holds that its leaders live simply, serve the faith and disdain the corrupt luxuries of the West. The paper trail tells a different story.
Despite projecting an image of religious piety and simplicity in Iran, Mojtaba Khamenei likely owns a property empire stretching from the Middle East to Europe worth hundreds of millions, according to investigations by Western media.
This despite the fact that the new ayatollah's name does not appear in the title deeds.
The man behind the assets
To understand who holds what, you need to know Aliakbar Ansari, a wealthy Iranian with deep ties to Iran's financial and security establishment.
Ansari is the figure at the centre of what UK and US authorities have identified as a network funnelling resources to Iran's ruling circle.
His connection to Mojtaba is not incidental — Ansari's father was appointed by Ali Khamenei himself to serve on the postwar reconstruction committee following the Iran-Iraq War.
On 30 October 2025, the UK government formally designated Ansari under the Iran (Sanctions) Regulations 2023.
The official notice, published by HM Treasury's Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation, stated that he had "facilitated and provided support to hostile activity by the Government of Iran, namely providing economic resources to the IRGC."
The public document is about as unambiguous as sanctions notices get.
Ansari's UK footprint is visible in public records.
Companies House filings link him to Birch Ventures Limited, a corporate vehicle at the centre of a property network that includes addresses on Bishops Avenue in north London — one of the capital's most expensive streets, where the company is linked to at least 11 mansions.
HM Land Registry title records for those properties are obtainable by anyone willing to pay a small fee.
The offshore structures layered on top, including nominee arrangements, mixed-nationality directorships, are typical of how wealth linked to sanctioned individuals is managed at arm's length from its ultimate beneficiary.
Notably, Ansari is not listed on the EU sanctions register.
The absence is striking, and it means his assets within the eurozone have faced no formal legal constraint and that any European holdings, which reporting by the Financial Times has described as a portfolio spanning hotels, resorts and shopping centres worth approximately €400 million, have remained beyond the reach of Brussels while Washington and London moved against him.
Bloomberg separately identified the portfolio as including luxury London properties exceeding $138 million, a villa in Dubai, and upscale hotels in Frankfurt and Mallorca, with funding largely from Iranian oil sales moving through British, Swiss, Liechtenstein and UAE banks via shell companies.
Ansari, through his lawyer, has strongly and repeatedly denied any financial or personal relationship with Mojtaba Khamenei or any connection to the Revolutionary Guards.
The Mojtaba designation
Mojtaba himself was sanctioned by the US Treasury under the first Trump administration.
On 4 November 2019, the 40th anniversary of the Iran hostage crisis, OFAC designated him for having acted on behalf of the Supreme Leader of Iran, coordinating directly with IRGC commanders and the Basij paramilitary force.
The Treasury press release states that he worked to advance his father's "destabilising regional ambitions and oppressive domestic objectives".
A separate 2020 OFAC action against Bonyad Mostazafan — a vast quasi-state foundation — widened the picture further.
That designation noted that Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel, Mojtaba's father-in-law and a senior conservative politician, occupied Foundation property worth around $100 million while paying well below market rent.
Following the paper trail
Mojtaba's name does not appear in any of the transactions described above.
The assets are held by associates, foundations and shell companies, with the beneficial owner invisible to any single registry.
What official sanctions records do confirm, across multiple jurisdictions, is a pattern of resources flowing through individuals and entities directly connected to him.
The OpenSanctions database consolidates every jurisdiction that has formally designated Mojtaba, drawing directly from OFAC, the UK sanctions list and equivalent bodies.
For those wanting to go further, the Iran Human Rights Monitor published a two-part investigation in March 2026 examining the network of foundations and quasi-state companies that operates within the orbit of the leader's office.
It draws on the same public record but adds analytical context on Mojtaba's security connections.