BTC $67,653.00 (+2.05%)
ETH $1,967.49 (+2.29%)
XRP $1.43 (+2.30%)
BNB $624.11 (+4.13%)
SOL $84.43 (+4.83%)
TRX $0.29 (+1.01%)
DOGE $0.10 (+4.56%)
BCH $562.76 (+1.81%)
ADA $0.28 (+5.59%)
LEO $8.69 (+0.06%)
HYPE $29.89 (+5.33%)
LINK $8.85 (+5.00%)
CC $0.16 (+2.90%)
XMR $331.96 (+1.67%)
XLM $0.16 (+2.86%)
RAIN $0.01 (-1.75%)
ZEC $258.80 (-0.09%)
HBAR $0.10 (+3.30%)
LTC $55.18 (+6.11%)
AVAX $9.14 (+3.90%)

Egypt vs Finland

Crypto regulation comparison

Egypt

Egypt

Finland

Finland

Restricted
Legal

Egypt heavily restricts cryptocurrency. The Central Bank of Egypt prohibits banks from dealing in or facilitating crypto transactions, and a 2018 Dar al-Ifta fatwa declared crypto trading haram. However, Egypt's 2020 banking law created a framework that could eventually allow regulated crypto under CBE licensing.

Cryptocurrency is legal in Finland and well-regulated by the FIN-FSA. Crypto gains are taxed as capital income at 30% (34% for gains exceeding €30,000). Finland is one of few EU countries that has actively enforced tax compliance on crypto through data requests to exchanges.

Tax Type Unclear
Tax Type Capital gains
Tax Rate N/A
Tax Rate 30-34%
Exchanges No No
Exchanges Yes Yes
Mining No No
Mining Yes Yes
Regulator Central Bank of Egypt (CBE), Dar al-Ifta
Regulator Finanssivalvonta (FIN-FSA)
Stablecoin Rules Not applicable under current restrictions
Stablecoin Rules Regulated under EU MiCA framework
Key Points
  • CBE prohibits banks and financial institutions from dealing in cryptocurrency
  • Dar al-Ifta issued a 2018 religious ruling (fatwa) against crypto trading
  • 2020 Central Bank and Banking Sector Law requires CBE approval for any crypto activity
  • Creating or operating a crypto platform without CBE license is illegal
  • Despite restrictions, Egypt has significant peer-to-peer crypto activity
Key Points
  • Crypto capital gains taxed at 30% (34% for gains over €30,000 per year)
  • FIN-FSA registers and supervises virtual currency providers under AML law
  • Finnish Tax Administration actively sends letters to crypto holders based on exchange data
  • Losses on crypto can be deducted from capital gains
  • MiCA framework applicable from December 2024