Rwanda’s central bank warned against crypto transactions involving the Rwandan franc. The move signals growing regulatory tension as crypto adoption accelerates across Africa. The National Bank of Rwanda flagged social media promotions promising high returns on franc-denominated crypto trades. Authorities reaffirmed existing restrictions and clarified legal boundaries for citizens and financial institutions.
The warning highlights a gap between global crypto platforms and local regulatory frameworks. Bybit launched Rwandan franc support on its peer-to-peer trading platform. Users can buy and sell crypto-assets using francs and earn commissions as merchants. The NBR rejected the arrangement as unauthorised in a public statement.
Rwanda maintains strict crypto restrictions since 2018. Digital assets remain outside its formal payment system. The Rwandan franc is the sole legal tender under current law. Crypto-assets cannot be used for payments and are not recognised as legal tender.
The NBR clarified enforcement mechanisms. Licensed financial institutions face explicit prohibition from converting francs into crypto or vice versa. Peer-to-peer trading involving the franc is unauthorised. This includes acting as a broker or intermediary. Citizens engaging in such transactions operate outside legal protection. They have no recourse for losses from scams, platform failures, or disputes.
The central bank warned that individuals proceed “entirely at their own risk.” This absence of legal remedy distinguishes crypto losses from traditional banking disputes where regulatory safeguards apply.
Rwanda is not simply maintaining restrictions. The Rwanda Capital Markets Authority released a draft virtual asset service provider licensing framework in March 2026. This signals potential evolution in crypto policy. The framework prohibits crypto mining, mixer services, and franc-pegged tokens whilst establishing licensing for regulated operators.
Unlicensed operations could face fines or penalties once enacted. However, crypto will remain outside Rwanda’s formal payment system even under new rules. The draft legislation states that crypto-assets will not be recognised as legal tender.
This approach reflects policymakers’ dual concern. They aim to protect financial stability and the franc’s integrity whilst creating pathways for regulated market participation. Rwanda ranks low in global crypto adoption indices due to restrictive policy.
For institutional investors, the message is clear. Rwanda’s regulatory environment remains hostile to uncontrolled crypto activity. However, it gradually formalises oversight mechanisms. The gap between international exchange ambitions and local law will persist until the VASP framework becomes law and enforcement mechanisms mature.
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