BTC $63,989.00 (-5.01%)
ETH $1,849.46 (-4.72%)
XRP $1.35 (-2.12%)
BNB $591.44 (-3.24%)
SOL $78.12 (-6.06%)
TRX $0.28 (-3.09%)
DOGE $0.09 (-2.08%)
BCH $503.15 (-11.62%)
ADA $0.26 (-3.16%)
LEO $8.08 (-1.41%)
HYPE $26.38 (-8.56%)
CC $0.16 (-0.59%)
LINK $8.22 (-4.67%)
XMR $306.25 (-4.92%)
XLM $0.15 (-2.99%)
RAIN $0.01 (-3.12%)
HBAR $0.09 (-3.28%)
ZEC $237.79 (-2.03%)
LTC $51.16 (-3.84%)
AVAX $8.31 (-5.67%)

Ghana vs Turkmenistan

Crypto regulation comparison

Ghana

Ghana

Turkmenistan

Turkmenistan

No Regulation
Legal

Ghana has no specific cryptocurrency legislation. The Bank of Ghana has warned citizens about the risks of crypto but has not imposed an outright ban. SEC Ghana has indicated plans to develop a regulatory framework for digital assets, and the country has one of Africa's growing crypto communities.

Turkmenistan enacted the Law on Virtual Assets effective January 2026, legalizing crypto exchanges and mining under Central Bank licensing. Crypto is treated as property, not legal tender.

Tax Type Unclear
Tax Type None
Tax Rate N/A
Tax Rate N/A
Exchanges Yes Yes
Exchanges Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Regulator Bank of Ghana (BoG), SEC Ghana
Regulator Central Bank of Turkmenistan
Stablecoin Rules No stablecoin regulation; Bank of Ghana exploring e-Cedi CBDC
Stablecoin Rules Regulated under Virtual Assets Law
Key Points
  • No specific cryptocurrency legislation or regulatory framework exists
  • Bank of Ghana issued warnings about crypto risks but has not banned it
  • SEC Ghana has expressed interest in developing a digital asset framework
  • Ghana has high crypto adoption relative to its economy, particularly for P2P trading
  • Bank of Ghana has been piloting the e-Cedi CBDC
Key Points
  • Law on Virtual Assets enacted November 2025, effective January 2026
  • Crypto exchanges and mining require Central Bank licensing
  • Crypto treated as property, not legal tender
  • Banks prohibited from directly providing crypto services
  • Low electricity costs attract mining operations