BTC $66,913.00 (-1.27%)
ETH $1,965.05 (-1.72%)
XRP $1.41 (-4.60%)
BNB $607.33 (-1.99%)
SOL $81.59 (-3.79%)
TRX $0.28 (+0.22%)
DOGE $0.10 (-2.82%)
BCH $549.48 (-1.87%)
ADA $0.27 (-3.44%)
LEO $8.66 (+3.09%)
HYPE $28.54 (-1.83%)
LINK $8.60 (-2.97%)
CC $0.16 (-3.36%)
XMR $327.35 (-4.28%)
XLM $0.16 (-4.41%)
RAIN $0.01 (-4.83%)
ZEC $257.12 (-9.58%)
HBAR $0.10 (-3.04%)
LTC $52.85 (-2.13%)
AVAX $8.84 (-2.85%)

Brunei vs Kyrgyzstan

Crypto regulation comparison

Brunei

Brunei

Kyrgyzstan

Kyrgyzstan

Restricted
Legal

Brunei has no specific cryptocurrency legislation. The BDCB (formerly AMBD) stated in 2017 that crypto is not legal tender and not regulated, warning the public about risks. Crypto is not banned but has no legal protection. No tax guidelines address crypto specifically.

Kyrgyzstan adopted the Law on Virtual Assets in 2022 requiring licensing for exchanges, mining, and VASPs. Over 120 licensed VASPs operate. Crypto turnover exceeded traditional securities market in 2024.

Tax Type None
Tax Type Income
Tax Rate N/A
Tax Rate 10%
Exchanges No No
Exchanges Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Regulator Brunei Darussalam Central Bank (BDCB, formerly AMBD)
Regulator State Financial Supervision Authority
Stablecoin Rules No stablecoin regulation
Stablecoin Rules Regulated under Virtual Assets Law
Key Points
  • BDCB stated in 2017 that crypto is not legal tender and not regulated
  • Crypto not recognized as legal tender
  • No specific cryptocurrency legislation
  • Financial institutions discouraged from dealing in crypto
  • No tax guidelines specifically address cryptocurrency
Key Points
  • Law on Virtual Assets adopted in 2022 with licensing framework
  • Over 120 licensed VASPs active by late 2024
  • Three license types: trading operator, currency exchanger, mining operator
  • Crypto sector contributed 800M KGS in taxes in 2024
  • Virtual assets not recognized as legal tender but circulate under special regime