Vavada Banner
BTC $66,847.00 (-2.36%)
ETH $1,990.40 (-3.37%)
XRP $1.39 (-4.96%)
BNB $617.14 (-1.90%)
SOL $85.01 (-3.84%)
TRX $0.29 (-0.05%)
DOGE $0.10 (-6.56%)
ADA $0.28 (-3.90%)
BCH $481.23 (-6.37%)
LEO $8.73 (-0.54%)
HYPE $28.06 (-2.21%)
CC $0.17 (+4.26%)
LINK $8.90 (-5.77%)
XMR $337.34 (-2.17%)
XLM $0.16 (-3.88%)
RAIN $0.01 (-0.12%)
HBAR $0.10 (-3.32%)
LTC $54.66 (-6.38%)
AVAX $9.12 (-5.28%)
ZEC $236.92 (-6.59%)

Central African Republic vs Namibia

Crypto regulation comparison

Central African Republic

Central African Republic

Namibia

Namibia

Legal
Legal

The Central African Republic briefly adopted Bitcoin as legal tender in 2022 under the 'Sango' project, but this was struck down by the Constitutional Court. Crypto remains legal but the legal tender status was reversed.

Namibia enacted the Virtual Assets Act (Act 10 of 2023) establishing a comprehensive licensing framework for VASPs. The Bank of Namibia is designated as regulator. Crypto is legal but not legal tender. No specific crypto tax framework yet.

Tax Type None
Tax Type No framework
Tax Rate N/A
Tax Rate N/A
Exchanges Yes Yes
Exchanges Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Regulator BEAC (Bank of Central African States)
Regulator Bank of Namibia
Stablecoin Rules No specific stablecoin regulation
Stablecoin Rules Regulated under Virtual Assets Act
Key Points
  • Bitcoin was briefly adopted as legal tender in 2022 via the Sango Act
  • Constitutional Court struck down the legal tender provision
  • Crypto trading and holding remain legal
  • BEAC opposed the Bitcoin legal tender move
  • Sango crypto hub project launched but has faced significant challenges
Key Points
  • Virtual Assets Act (Act 10 of 2023) signed into law July 2023
  • VASPs must obtain licenses from Bank of Namibia to operate
  • Provisional licenses granted to first two exchanges in 2025
  • Non-compliance penalties up to NAD 10 million and 10 years imprisonment
  • Crypto is not legal tender but merchants may accept at their discretion