In brief
- Kenyan parliament enacted the Virtual Asset Services Providers Bill, which seeks to establish regulatory bodies and crypto frameworks in the country.
- The bill identifies Kenya’s Central Bank and the Capital Markets Authority as regulatory bodies that will oversee brokers, investment advisors, and others.
- Sub-Saharan Africa ranked third in Chainalysis’ geographic crypto adoption report, with Kenya ranked fourth among African nations in total value received.
Kenya is one step closer to regulating crypto in the country, as its parliament enacted the Virtual Asset Service Providers Bill 2025 last week, a senior parliament member told Reuters.
The bill will now need to be signed by Kenyan President William Ruto in order to create the legislative framework, which regulates crypto service providers and addresses potential misuse in the industry.
“We are hoping that Kenya can be now the gateway into Africa,” finance committee chairman Kuria Kimani told Reuters. “Most of the young people between 18 and 35 years of age are now using virtual assets for trading, settling payments, and as a way of investment or doing business.”
Among the bill’s highlights is the identification of Kenya’s key regulatory bodies for the industry, namely the Central Bank of Kenya and the Capital Markets Authority.
While each will play a role in regulating service providers like crypto wallets and exchanges, the Central Bank alone will oversee payment processors that arrange transactions between fiat and virtual currencies. On the other hand, Kenya’s Capital Markets Authority, is responsible for solely regulating brokers, investment advisors, and digital asset managers.
Crypto momentum has been growing in Africa with Sub-Saharan Africa ranking third in Chainalysis’ crypto adoption report, thanks in large part due to its strong retail activity.
Kenya specifically, ranked fourth among African countries by total value received from the year dated July 2024 to June 2025, with nearly $20 billion in assets received during that time. However, the country has lagged behind neighbors in terms of regulation, an analyst told Decrypt.
“Other countries in the region—notably South Africa—already have clear crypto licensing regimes, so Kenya is playing catch-up here,” said Coin Bureau analyst and co-founder Nic Puckrin.
“South Africa began issuing crypto licenses in 2023, having classified crypto assets as financial products the year before, so Kenya is around two years behind,” he added. “That means it will have to move quickly if it wants to become the ‘gateway into Africa.’”
Earlier this year, protests erupted in the country over financial distrust, and protesters pointed to crypto as a potential outlet for younger generations to escape an unfair system.
The region is familiar with using digital money, with 96% of households in Kenya having used a mobile money app called M-PESA. Sam Altman’s Worldcoin was present in the country as early as 2023, but privacy concerns led to a Kenyan court order clamping down on the firm’s practices earlier this year.
Additional reporting by Vince Dioquino
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