In South Africa crypto regulation news, the National Treasury and the South African Reserve Bank extended the public comment deadline for draft Capital Flow Management Regulations from May 18 to June 30, 2026, following sustained industry backlash over proposed penalties, search-and-seizure provisions, and the forced-disposal language in Regulation 8.
The extension applies to the first major overhaul of South Africa’s exchange-control framework since 1961, a draft that formally pulls crypto assets into the same regulatory perimeter as foreign currency and gold.
The extension directly affects crypto exchanges registered with the Financial Sector Conduct Authority, cross-border payment providers with ZAR-denominated exposure, and the roughly 59 crypto asset service providers that have obtained or applied for FSCA licenses since the December 2023 deadline.
For those firms, six additional weeks of comment period translates into six additional weeks before a compliance manual, with specific thresholds and approval requirements, takes shape.
South Africa Crypto: Draft Capital Flow Management Regulations: What the 1961 Overhaul Actually Requires and Why Treasury Blinked
Everyone keeps saying the $BTC 4-year cycle is dead.
— Ted (@TedPillows) May 22, 2026
But the charts don't lie. pic.twitter.com/yyWtSbYN1d
The draft regulations under the Currency and Exchanges Act propose a significant overhaul of South Africa’s capital-flow architecture, the first in over 60 years.
The main change is a shift from a pre-approval model for cross-border financial flows to a risk-based surveillance framework that formally integrates crypto assets for the first time.
Legal analysts noted that “Crypto is not being liberalized; it is being absorbed into the existing system.” Violations of regulations could result in fines of up to approximately $60,270 (1 million rand) and prison terms of up to five years.
A particularly controversial aspect, Regulation 8, includes a “compulsory surrender” provision, leading critics to fear forced liquidation of crypto assets. However, the Treasury and SARB responded, stating that such actions would occur only after an offense had been committed.
The deadline for feedback was extended in response to requests from various stakeholders, who argued that the initial 44-day window was too short for such significant regulations.
Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana had previously indicated that crypto would be included in the capital-flow regime, making the draft’s scope less surprising.
VALR, Registered VASPs, and the Commercial Stakes: Compliance Pressure, Offshore Risk, and the Forced-Disposal Overhang
VALR CEO Farzam Ehsani has been a significant critic of draft regulations that could jeopardize South Africa’s progressive stance on crypto.
His concerns stem from South Africa crypto classification as a financial product under FAIS Notice 90 of 2022, which requires licensed intermediaries by December 2023.
Introducing these assets into an outdated exchange-control framework creates new challenges. The risk particularly affects exchanges that handle cross-border remittances and corporations that use crypto as a treasury asset.
A High Court ruling in Standard Bank v Safari, currently under appeal, previously allowed cross-border crypto transfers without prior approval. However, the draft regulations would change this entirely.
For example, Binance’s strategy of integrating the Argentine peso highlights the operational difficulties when capital-control rules clash with crypto, a situation South African exchanges may soon face.
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Emerging-Market Regulatory Pattern: South Africa Crypto Absorption Model Versus Nigeria, FATF, and the Global VASP Licensing Wave
The biggest myth about crypto in Africa is that it’s unregulated.
— Quidax: Your Crypto Plug (@QuidaxGlobal) May 22, 2026
That may have been true a few years ago. It isn’t true anymore.
In 2026, crypto businesses across Africa face real compliance requirements, from SEC licensing in Nigeria to CASP rules in South Africa.
The…
The South Africa crypto strategy involves integrating it into existing capital-control frameworks, unlike Nigeria, which has established a separate regulatory framework for Virtual Asset Service Providers under its Investments and Securities Act 2025.
This creates a distinct regulatory environment in Nigeria, while South Africa relies on a 60-year-old exchange-control system, asking the industry to adapt accordingly.
Both countries comply with the Financial Action Task Force’s Travel Rule and VASP registration requirements, which are implemented by over 50 jurisdictions.
South African crypto service providers are now classified as “accountable institutions” under amendments effective December 19, 2022, mandating KYC, transaction monitoring, and suspicious activity reporting, similar to those for banks.
Additionally, the Capital Flow Management Regulations impose further capital-export controls, adding to existing AML/CFT compliance burdens not seen in most peer jurisdictions.
The author does not hold or have a position in any securities discussed in the article. All prices were quoted at the time of writing.
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