Vavada Banner
BTC $71,890.00 (+1.13%)
ETH $2,196.93 (+0.60%)
XRP $1.35 (+0.76%)
BNB $605.50 (+0.34%)
SOL $83.93 (+1.94%)
TRX $0.32 (+0.73%)
DOGE $0.09 (+0.87%)
ADA $0.26 (+1.97%)
HYPE $39.61 (+1.83%)
LEO $10.10 (-0.16%)
BCH $443.50 (+0.60%)
LINK $9.01 (+1.37%)
XMR $345.34 (+6.06%)
ZEC $372.99 (+16.01%)
CC $0.15 (+8.83%)
XLM $0.16 (-1.11%)
M $2.64 (-1.81%)
LTC $54.71 (+1.03%)
AVAX $9.48 (+4.39%)
HBAR $0.09 (+1.58%)

Albania vs Botswana

Crypto regulation comparison

Albania

Albania

Botswana

Botswana

Legal
Legal

Albania adopted Law No. 66/2020 on Financial Markets Based on Distributed Ledger Technology, establishing a comprehensive licensing framework for crypto activities. The AMF and AKSHI jointly supervise. A 2022 licensing regime allows five types of DLT licenses. Crypto profits taxed at 15% capital gains; mining income taxed at 0-23%.

Botswana passed the Virtual Assets Act in 2022, first African country to issue crypto licenses. NBFIRA supervises VASPs. 4 licensed entities as of 2024. Penalties up to P250,000 or 5 years imprisonment.

Tax Type Capital gains
Tax Type None
Tax Rate 15%
Tax Rate N/A
Exchanges Yes Yes
Exchanges Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Regulator Financial Supervisory Authority of Albania (AMF)
Regulator Non-Bank Financial Institutions Regulatory Authority (NBFIRA)
Stablecoin Rules No specific stablecoin regulation
Stablecoin Rules No stablecoin regulation
Key Points
  • Law on Financial Markets Based on DLT adopted in 2020
  • Five types of DLT licenses: exchange, agent, custody, collective investment, innovative service
  • Crypto profits taxed at 15% capital gains; mining at 0-23% income rates
  • AML/KYC requirements apply to crypto service providers
  • Albania remains on FATF grey list for AML/CFT monitoring
Key Points
  • Virtual Assets Act enacted in 2022, effective Feb 22, 2022
  • First African country to issue crypto licenses via NBFIRA
  • 4 licensed VASPs as of December 2024
  • Bank of Botswana assesses domestic crypto risks as minimal
  • Unregistered crypto dealers face fines up to P250,000 or imprisonment