BTC $66,873.00 (+0.86%)
ETH $1,946.24 (+0.15%)
XRP $1.41 (-0.86%)
BNB $607.57 (+0.58%)
SOL $82.03 (+0.98%)
TRX $0.28 (+2.05%)
DOGE $0.10 (-0.64%)
BCH $560.25 (+1.46%)
ADA $0.27 (-0.52%)
LEO $8.68 (+1.90%)
HYPE $29.13 (+1.99%)
XMR $335.56 (+2.89%)
LINK $8.52 (-0.55%)
CC $0.16 (-5.88%)
XLM $0.16 (-1.31%)
RAIN $0.01 (+1.87%)
ZEC $263.69 (-1.12%)
HBAR $0.10 (-1.05%)
LTC $52.53 (-1.17%)
AVAX $8.89 (+0.41%)

Denmark vs Iraq

Crypto regulation comparison

Denmark

Denmark

Iraq

Iraq

Legal
Banned

Cryptocurrency is legal in Denmark and regulated under EU frameworks including MiCA. Denmark has notably high tax rates on crypto gains, treated as personal income and taxed at rates up to 52%. The Danish Tax Council confirmed in 2018 that gains and losses on Bitcoin are taxable.

Iraq has banned cryptocurrency dealings. The Central Bank of Iraq issued a directive in 2017 prohibiting banks, financial institutions, and exchange companies from dealing in cryptocurrency. Despite the ban, some underground and peer-to-peer crypto trading reportedly persists.

Tax Type Capital gains
Tax Type Unclear
Tax Rate 37-52%
Tax Rate N/A
Exchanges Yes Yes
Exchanges No No
Mining Yes Yes
Mining No No
Regulator Finanstilsynet (Danish FSA), Skattestyrelsen
Regulator CBI (Central Bank of Iraq)
Stablecoin Rules Regulated under EU MiCA framework (Denmark is EU member but outside eurozone)
Stablecoin Rules Not applicable; crypto activities prohibited
Key Points
  • Crypto gains taxed as personal income at 37-52% (among the highest in the world)
  • Losses on crypto can be deducted against gains
  • Finanstilsynet supervises crypto businesses under the Danish AML Act
  • Denmark does not have its own crypto-specific legislation beyond EU frameworks
  • Skattestyrelsen (tax authority) actively monitors crypto transactions and issues guidance
Key Points
  • CBI banned all crypto dealings by financial institutions in 2017
  • Exchange companies are prohibited from handling cryptocurrency
  • No regulatory framework for crypto businesses
  • Underground and P2P crypto trading reportedly exists despite the ban
  • The ban is motivated by AML concerns and financial stability considerations