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Africa Crypto Rules Reshape XRP Ripple (XRP)’s Continental Push

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By Aggregated - see source on April 7, 2026 Blockchain
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Tony Kim
Apr 07, 2026 05:35

Eight African nations now regulate crypto as South Africa, Nigeria, and Kenya finalize frameworks. Ripple (XRP) expands RLUSD stablecoin and custody services across the continent.





Eight African countries have now implemented crypto-specific regulations, with South Africa, Nigeria, and Kenya leading a continental push that’s reshaping how digital assets operate across the world’s fastest-growing crypto market. Sub-Saharan Africa received over $205 billion in onchain value between July 2024 and June 2025—a 52% year-over-year jump.

Ripple (XRP) is positioning itself at the center of this regulatory wave, expanding RLUSD stablecoin access through partnerships with Chipper Cash, VALR, and Yellow Card while landing a custody deal with Absa Bank.

Country-by-Country Breakdown

South Africa moved first. Since June 2023, crypto asset service providers need licenses from the Financial Sector Conduct Authority. The country has adopted FATF Travel Rule requirements, putting it on par with major Western jurisdictions.

Nigeria—ranked sixth globally in the 2025 Crypto Adoption Index—passed the Investments and Securities Act 2025, formally classifying digital assets as securities. More significantly, the Central Bank reversed its previous ban on banks working with licensed crypto providers. An AML supervision pilot for virtual asset service providers is now underway.

Kenya signed its Virtual Asset Service Providers Bill into law in October 2025. Oversight falls to the Central Bank and Capital Markets Authority. A nationwide consultation on implementing regulations is ongoing.

Mauritius operates under its 2021 VAITOS Act, one of Africa’s earliest comprehensive frameworks. The Financial Services Commission licenses VASPs across broker-dealer, custodian, and marketplace categories. New stablecoin guidance dropped last year.

Ghana now requires VASP registration. Botswana, Namibia, and Seychelles have introduced crypto-specific policies. Ethiopia, Morocco, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda are actively exploring frameworks.

Why Africa Matters for Crypto

The numbers tell the story. Africa handles 70% of the world’s $1 trillion mobile money market. In Sub-Saharan Africa, mobile money account ownership hit 40% of adults in 2024, up from 27% in 2021. A third of these users have no other access to financial services.

Traditional cross-border payments remain painful—multi-day settlement times and steep fees plague remittance corridors between Africa, the Middle East, and Asia. Stablecoins offer a workaround. Businesses across the continent increasingly use them for trade settlement, treasury management, and cross-border transfers.

Ripple’s RLUSD has found traction in this environment. A pilot with Mercy Corps Ventures in Kenya aims to speed up drought relief aid delivery. The company’s 2026 survey found 57% of finance leaders prefer partners offering custody, orchestration, and compliance as a package—the pitch Ripple is making with its Absa Bank deal.

What Happens Next

Cross-border regulatory collaboration is emerging. South Africa, Nigeria, and Kenya’s frameworks could serve as templates for smaller markets. Regional fintech initiatives are pushing toward harmonization.

For traders watching African markets: Nigeria and Ethiopia’s high adoption rankings suggest continued retail demand regardless of regulatory outcomes. The real question is whether institutional capital follows as frameworks solidify through 2026.

Image source: Shutterstock


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