BTC $66,850.00 (+0.93%)
ETH $1,946.86 (+0.33%)
XRP $1.41 (-0.85%)
BNB $607.35 (+0.72%)
SOL $82.16 (+1.17%)
TRX $0.28 (+2.09%)
DOGE $0.10 (-0.17%)
BCH $560.54 (+1.54%)
ADA $0.27 (-0.43%)
LEO $8.68 (+1.88%)
HYPE $29.13 (+2.31%)
XMR $335.38 (+2.76%)
LINK $8.52 (-0.41%)
CC $0.16 (-5.12%)
XLM $0.16 (-1.32%)
RAIN $0.01 (+1.81%)
ZEC $263.67 (-0.97%)
HBAR $0.10 (-1.23%)
LTC $52.58 (-0.97%)
AVAX $8.89 (+0.64%)

Congo (Republic) vs South Africa

Crypto regulation comparison

Congo (Republic)

Congo (Republic)

South Africa

South Africa

No Regulation
Legal

The Republic of Congo has no specific cryptocurrency regulation. As a CEMAC member, it falls under BEAC oversight. BEAC has cautioned about crypto risks.

South Africa has embraced crypto regulation. In 2022, the FSCA declared crypto assets as financial products under the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services (FAIS) Act, requiring crypto service providers to obtain FSCA licenses. SARS taxes crypto gains under capital gains tax (up to 18% effective rate for individuals) or income tax depending on trading frequency. South Africa is the largest crypto market in Africa.

Tax Type None
Tax Type Capital gains
Tax Rate N/A
Tax Rate 18% (effective max ~18%)
Exchanges Yes Yes
Exchanges Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Mining No No
Regulator BEAC (Bank of Central African States)
Regulator FSCA (Financial Sector Conduct Authority), SARB (South African Reserve Bank)
Stablecoin Rules No stablecoin regulation
Stablecoin Rules Crypto assets declared financial products under FAIS; stablecoins included
Key Points
  • No specific national cryptocurrency legislation
  • BEAC provides regional monetary oversight
  • Part of the CEMAC monetary zone with the CFA franc
  • Limited crypto adoption and infrastructure
  • Neighboring CAR briefly adopted Bitcoin as legal tender
Key Points
  • Crypto declared a financial product under FAIS Act (2022); service providers must be FSCA-licensed
  • FSCA began licensing crypto asset service providers (CASPs) in 2023
  • Capital gains taxed at effective rate up to 18% (45% max marginal rate × 40% inclusion)
  • Frequent trading may be classified as income and taxed at marginal rates (up to 45%)
  • SARB regulates cross-border crypto transactions under exchange control regulations