Ripple says a wave of regulatory progress is unlocking crypto adoption across Africa — and its new report outlines where that momentum is taking hold and why the firm is rolling out solutions to “power Africa’s expanding digital economy.” Key takeaway - Roughly eight African countries have already adopted crypto-specific rules, with several more actively building frameworks. Ripple argues that clearer regimes in major markets are beginning to serve as templates for neighbors, while cross-border fintech projects are knitting together a more harmonized regional ecosystem. That regulatory momentum, the report says, is translating into measurable on‑chain growth and practical use cases across the continent. Country snapshots - South Africa: In June 2023 the country put in place a comprehensive framework that treats certain crypto assets as financial products. Crypto Asset Service Providers (CASPs) must be licensed and regulated by both the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) and the Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC). Johannesburg has implemented the FATF Travel Rule and is probing policies for stablecoins and tokenization via its Intergovernmental Fintech Working Group. - Kenya: Ripple highlights rapid movement from draft to law — a Virtual Asset Service Providers bill introduced by the National Treasury in March 2025 became law in October 2025, placing supervisory responsibility with the Central Bank of Kenya and the Capital Markets Authority. Kenya is running nationwide consultations on implementing regulations, and Ripple expects its framework to influence the region in 2026 as digital-asset infrastructure ramps up. - Mauritius: An early adopter, Mauritius established one of Africa’s first comprehensive regimes with its 2021 VAITOS Act, featuring strict AML/CFT rules. The island nation released additional guidance on stablecoins over the past year and is exploring a fuller regulatory regime for them. - Nigeria: Long a major crypto market, Nigeria is formalizing policy: the Investments and Securities Act 2025 recognizes digital assets as securities under the oversight of the Nigerian SEC. The Central Bank of Nigeria has relaxed previous restrictions on banks working with licensed digital-asset providers and launched a supervision pilot for several VASPs — moves Ripple frames as shifting toward innovation-friendly, consumer-protective regulation. Wider regional picture - Ghana’s central bank has begun registering VASPs. Botswana, Namibia and Seychelles have taken steps toward crypto-specific policy. Ethiopia, Morocco, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda are actively assessing options. Ripple describes this patchwork of reforms as converging toward greater clarity and cross-border interoperability. On‑chain growth and adoption signals - Sub‑Saharan Africa recorded more than $205 billion in on‑chain value between July 2024 and June 2025 — a 52% year‑over‑year increase that ranked the region among the world’s fastest‑growing crypto markets. Nigeria and Ethiopia ranked in the Top 15 of the 2025 Global Crypto Adoption Index, underscoring robust grassroots demand for digital assets. Why it matters - Ripple frames these regulatory shifts as creating a foundation for scalable fintech, cross-border payments, tokenization and stablecoin use — opening room for both enterprise-grade crypto solutions and consumer-facing products. The report suggests that as national regimes mature and align, Africa could become a significant growth market for digital-asset infrastructure and services. (Image credit: OpenArt; chart: TradingView.com) Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news