South Africa has published draft Capital Flow Management Regulations that would bring crypto assets directly into the country’s exchange-control framework, triggering concern across the local crypto industry.
The draft rules, published by National Treasury for public comment, are intended to replace the Exchange Control Regulations of 1961. The official government notice says comments are due by 10 June 2026, after which National Treasury and the South African Reserve Bank will review submissions and make revisions where necessary.
The most controversial part is that crypto would be treated much more like foreign currency or gold for capital-flow purposes. Residents above a future threshold set by the Finance Minister could be required to declare crypto assets and offer them for sale to National Treasury, an authorised dealer, or an authorised crypto asset service provider.
What the Draft Regulations Say
Crypto Assets Would Fall Under Capital Flow Controls
The draft regulations say any person in South Africa who controls, obtains possession of, or becomes entitled to sell or transfer foreign currency or crypto assets above a determined threshold must declare those assets within 30 days, unless a longer period is prescribed.
That threshold has not yet been set. This is one reason the proposal has created uncertainty. Investors and businesses do not yet know whether the rules would mainly affect large offshore transfers, high-net-worth holders, active traders, or a much broader group of crypto users.
The draft also creates the concept of authorised crypto asset service providers, meaning licensed firms could become the legal gateway for certain crypto transactions that fall within the capital-flow regime. South African law firm ENSafrica said the proposal introduces authorised crypto asset service providers into the exchange-control system and gives regulators a new administrative sanctions regime for breaches.
Compulsory Surrender Is the Flashpoint
The phrase causing the strongest reaction is “compulsory surrender.” Under the draft, residents who hold crypto assets above the threshold may have to declare and offer them for sale through approved channels. The draft also says the purchase price may not be below market value, which means the proposal is not written as simple confiscation.
Still, the practical concern is obvious. Crypto holders value self-custody because it lets them control their assets without relying on banks, exchanges, or state intermediaries. A rule that can force declaration and sale would change that relationship dramatically.
Daily Investor reported that the mandatory sale requirement would also apply where someone becomes entitled to receive foreign currency or crypto assets through a balance in a foreign bank account or similar arrangement.
Enforcement Powers Raise Privacy Concerns
Search and Information Powers Would Expand
The draft does not only regulate transactions. It also gives National Treasury or authorised persons broad powers to demand information considered necessary for the purposes of the regulations. Appointed persons may enter and search premises to inspect books or documents, either with consent or, in certain cases, without prior consent if a warrant is authorised or if legal conditions are met.
The rules also include provisions allowing authorities to attach money, crypto assets, or other property suspected of being connected to a contravention. Crypto assets may be credited into a designated deposit address, and authorities may issue orders restricting withdrawals or dealings with assets in accounts.
That language is especially sensitive in crypto because asset control often depends on private keys, wallet access, and seed phrases. BeInCrypto reported that refusal to disclose access credentials could expose users to penalties, including fines or prison time, though the exact application would depend on the final text and enforcement approach.
Peer-to-Peer Crypto Could Be Hit Hard
If implemented broadly, the draft could make larger peer-to-peer crypto transactions much harder for South African residents. Reports from local and crypto-focused outlets say transactions above future thresholds may need to move through authorised intermediaries, with declared purposes and compliance checks.
That would be a major change for users who rely on direct wallet-to-wallet transfers, self-custody, offshore platforms, or crypto payments outside traditional financial channels.
Supporters of tighter rules may argue that South Africa needs better controls to stop capital flight, money laundering, sanctions evasion, and illicit cross-border flows. Critics argue the draft risks punishing ordinary users, weakening property rights, and pushing activity into less visible channels.
Why the Backlash Is Growing
South Africa has already regulated crypto in other ways. The Financial Sector Conduct Authority declared crypto assets to be financial products in 2022, and the 2026 Budget Review said the new capital-flow amendments are meant to complement that framework by bringing crypto into the capital flows management system.
That context matters. The government is not starting from zero. It is trying to close gaps around cross-border crypto movement, especially where digital assets can function like foreign exchange.
The problem is proportionality. Industry participants are likely to ask whether the same goal can be achieved through licensing, reporting, risk-based supervision, and targeted enforcement rather than forced surrender-style powers over privately held crypto.
What Comes Next
The next key date is the public comment deadline. The government notice says submissions are due by 10 June 2026, although some industry commentary has circulated earlier dates, adding to the confusion around the process.
After comments close, National Treasury and the South African Reserve Bank are expected to consider feedback and revise the draft where necessary. That means the rules are not final, and the strongest objections may still shape the outcome.
For crypto users, the most important issues to watch are the final threshold amounts, whether self-custody is explicitly protected, how cross-border transfers will be treated, and whether enforcement powers are narrowed before implementation.
South Africa is trying to modernise capital controls for a crypto era. The question is whether it can do that without making ordinary holders feel that their wallets are only conditionally theirs.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















