BTC $67,752.00 (+0.94%)
ETH $1,952.76 (-1.35%)
XRP $1.42 (-0.56%)
BNB $610.41 (-0.45%)
SOL $83.24 (+1.08%)
TRX $0.28 (+1.12%)
DOGE $0.10 (+0.26%)
BCH $561.90 (+0.15%)
ADA $0.27 (-0.82%)
LEO $8.59 (-0.62%)
HYPE $29.29 (+2.00%)
XMR $333.57 (+1.45%)
LINK $8.61 (-1.42%)
CC $0.16 (-2.74%)
XLM $0.16 (-0.03%)
RAIN $0.01 (+3.13%)
ZEC $264.38 (+0.58%)
HBAR $0.10 (-0.78%)
LTC $53.37 (+0.11%)
AVAX $9.00 (+0.95%)

Montenegro vs El Salvador

Crypto regulation comparison

Montenegro

Montenegro

El Salvador

El Salvador

Legal
Legal

Montenegro has no specific crypto law but crypto is not prohibited. Working toward EU candidacy and potential MiCA alignment. Capital gains taxed under general provisions.

El Salvador made history in September 2021 by becoming the first country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender through the Bitcoin Law. However, under a January 2025 IMF agreement (Decreto 199), El Salvador amended the law to make Bitcoin acceptance by businesses voluntary rather than mandatory, and repealed several articles. There is no capital gains tax on Bitcoin. The CNAD regulates digital assets.

Tax Type Capital gains
Tax Type No tax
Tax Rate 9-15%
Tax Rate 0%
Exchanges Yes Yes
Exchanges Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Regulator Central Bank of Montenegro, Capital Market Authority
Regulator BCR (Banco Central de Reserva), CNAD (Comisión Nacional de Activos Digitales)
Stablecoin Rules No specific stablecoin regulation
Stablecoin Rules USD is the primary currency; Bitcoin-specific legislation in place
Key Points
  • No specific cryptocurrency legislation but crypto is legal
  • Working toward EU candidacy and MiCA alignment
  • Capital gains on crypto taxed at 9-15%
  • Central Bank has acknowledged crypto without banning it
  • Growing interest in crypto-friendly policies
Key Points
  • First country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender in September 2021 via the Bitcoin Law
  • Government developed the Chivo wallet for citizens, offering $30 USD in BTC incentive
  • January 2025 Decreto 199 made merchant Bitcoin acceptance voluntary (IMF condition)
  • No capital gains tax on Bitcoin transactions for individuals
  • Government has been accumulating Bitcoin reserves and launched Bitcoin-backed bonds