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Zimbabwe Pushes Crypto Firms to Register as New Law Tightens AML Compliance Controls
Zimbabwe has formalized and legalized its cryptocurrency sector under Statutory Instrument 99 of 2026.
Global Compliance Pressure
The Zimbabwean government has formalized the country’s cryptocurrency sector under a new regulatory framework aimed at curbing money laundering and bringing the digital asset business out of the shadow economy. The newly gazetted legislation, published as Statutory Instrument 99 of 2026, places all crypto entities under the direct oversight of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ)’s anti-money laundering arm.
Under this regime, commercial enterprises that help users buy, sell, move, or store digital assets must formally register as virtual asset service providers (VASPs). The mandate ends the ambiguity that began in 2018 after the central bank ordered financial institutions to stop processing crypto-related transactions.
According to one report, the legislation is part of an effort to keep the country off the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) grey list.
“A big part of S.I.99 is really Zimbabwe showing its homework to the world,” a local tech publication, Techzim, reported following the gazetting, pointing out that the regulations are designed to police financial crime rather than offer a sovereign endorsement of cryptocurrencies as legal tender.
The regulations impose serious operational compliance demands modeled after traditional commercial banking. To operate legally, digital asset companies must now fulfil several structural requirements, including establishing a legally registered domestic subsidiary and paying an annual registration fee of $500. The companies must also implement the travel rule, while directors will be required to clear background checks.
The statutory instrument also takes what is described as a technology-neutral stance on emerging finance, clarifying that decentralization does not shield businesses from accountability. This means companies or organizations with the ability to alter a smart contract, route funds, or set transaction fees meet the threshold of exercising control and are therefore legally required to comply.
While the legislation is said to impose high compliance costs for local fintech startups, proponents argue that clear guidelines provide a predictable legal environment that could protect the domestic fintech ecosystem from unexpected regulatory shutdowns.