BTC $66,381.00 (-1.08%)
ETH $1,924.05 (-2.41%)
XRP $1.40 (-4.10%)
BNB $600.55 (-2.41%)
SOL $80.54 (-2.01%)
TRX $0.28 (+1.12%)
DOGE $0.10 (-2.72%)
BCH $553.23 (-1.52%)
ADA $0.27 (-3.56%)
LEO $8.69 (+1.95%)
HYPE $28.39 (-1.25%)
XMR $326.50 (-2.89%)
LINK $8.44 (-3.12%)
CC $0.16 (-7.02%)
XLM $0.16 (-3.42%)
RAIN $0.01 (-1.25%)
ZEC $259.48 (-6.53%)
HBAR $0.10 (-3.68%)
LTC $52.09 (-3.43%)
AVAX $8.81 (-2.26%)

Gambia vs United States

Crypto regulation comparison

Gambia

Gambia

United States

United States

No Regulation
Legal

The Gambia has no specific cryptocurrency regulation. The central bank has not issued formal guidance on crypto.

The United States has the world's most complex crypto regulatory landscape, with overlapping federal and state jurisdictions. The SEC regulates crypto securities and has pursued enforcement actions against exchanges and token issuers. The CFTC oversees crypto derivatives and considers Bitcoin a commodity. FinCEN applies BSA requirements to crypto exchanges as money service businesses. The IRS taxes crypto as property: short-term gains at income tax rates (10-37%), long-term gains at 0-20%. New 1099-DA broker reporting rules take effect from 2025. Multiple states have their own requirements, with New York's BitLicense being the most stringent.

Tax Type None
Tax Type Capital gains
Tax Rate N/A
Tax Rate 0-37%
Exchanges Yes Yes
Exchanges Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Regulator Central Bank of The Gambia
Regulator SEC, CFTC, FinCEN, OCC, IRS, State regulators
Stablecoin Rules No stablecoin regulation
Stablecoin Rules Stablecoin legislation actively being developed in Congress; existing oversight by SEC, CFTC, state regulators
Key Points
  • No specific cryptocurrency legislation
  • Central bank has not issued formal crypto guidance
  • Crypto not recognized as legal tender
  • Limited crypto adoption
  • No licensing framework for crypto services
Key Points
  • SEC regulates crypto as securities under Howey test; major enforcement actions (Ripple, Coinbase, Binance)
  • CFTC classifies Bitcoin and Ether as commodities; oversees derivatives markets
  • IRS treats crypto as property: short-term gains taxed at 10-37%, long-term (1yr+) at 0-20%
  • FinCEN requires exchanges to register as MSBs and comply with BSA/AML requirements
  • 1099-DA broker reporting for centralized exchanges effective from tax year 2025