BTC $64,766.00 (-4.56%)
ETH $1,859.56 (-5.54%)
XRP $1.34 (-5.35%)
BNB $587.58 (-5.46%)
SOL $77.84 (-8.33%)
TRX $0.29 (-0.43%)
DOGE $0.09 (-4.31%)
BCH $541.78 (-3.30%)
ADA $0.26 (-5.41%)
LEO $8.12 (-2.14%)
HYPE $27.21 (-8.61%)
CC $0.16 (-0.37%)
LINK $8.24 (-6.62%)
XMR $311.67 (-3.39%)
XLM $0.15 (-2.81%)
RAIN $0.01 (-1.64%)
HBAR $0.09 (-3.30%)
LTC $51.35 (-5.71%)
ZEC $234.19 (-8.43%)
AVAX $8.42 (-6.74%)

Pakistan vs Turkmenistan

Crypto regulation comparison

Pakistan

Pakistan

Turkmenistan

Turkmenistan

Restricted
Legal

Pakistan has a hostile regulatory environment for cryptocurrency. The State Bank of Pakistan has prohibited financial institutions from facilitating crypto transactions, and the government has considered outright bans. Despite this, Pakistan has high informal crypto adoption, ranking among the top countries for P2P crypto volume. The SECP has explored blockchain regulation but no licensing framework exists for exchanges.

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 None
Tax Type None
Tax Rate N/A
Tax Rate N/A
Exchanges No No
Exchanges Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Regulator SBP (State Bank of Pakistan), SECP
Regulator Central Bank of Turkmenistan
Stablecoin Rules No regulation; SBP has not authorized any crypto activities
Stablecoin Rules Regulated under Virtual Assets Law
Key Points
  • SBP prohibits banks and financial institutions from processing crypto transactions
  • No licensing framework for crypto exchanges; operating informally is risky
  • High P2P crypto adoption despite regulatory hostility
  • Government has considered formal banning legislation multiple times
  • SECP has explored digital asset regulation but no framework enacted
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