In 2026, the story from Africa regarding crypto is one of regulation. Nigeria, South Africa, and Kenya are just some of the big markets moving to regulate the industry, but it wasn’t always this way.
For much of the last decade, Africa’s relationship with crypto was defined by official suspicion and distrust.
Nigeria’s Central Bank barred financial institutions from facilitating crypto transactions. Kenya’s regulators issued repeated warnings. South Africa’s Reserve Bank kept the sector at arm’s length. The message from the African government was that crypto wasn’t welcome. It didn’t work.
Demand for crypto didn’t dry up, nor did activity. Peer-to-peer trading volumes surged as informal networks stepped in to fill the gap left by the restriction.
As the market shifted away from formal spaces, user behaviour evolved. This market, which had been forced into informal networks, began using crypto for more than just speculation. Adoption shifted toward utility.
Between July 2024 and June 2025, Sub-Saharan Africa got more than $205 billion in on-chain cryptocurrency value. This was a 52% increase from the prior year, making Sub-Saharan Africa the third-fastest-growing crypto region in the world.
Nigeria alone accounted for $92.1 billion of that total. Transfers under $10,000 represented over 8% of regional activity, compared to 6% globally. These aren’t speculative trades. They’re bills, payroll, and family support.
When regulators made the decision to ban crypto in certain markets, they didn’t consider, or weren’t aware, that crypto would find genuine product-market fit in Africa.
More so, they didn’t foresee the use case for payments and remittances instead of speculation.
Stablecoin adoption in Africa is high. The continent leads in stablecoin adoption, with markets like Nigeria leading the charge. In the African market, dollar-pegged stablecoins like USDT and USDC are favored.
Per Chainalysis, stablecoins now account for roughly 43% of the region’s total crypto transaction volume.
Currency devaluation has been one of the drivers of crypto and stablecoin adoption on the continent. When Nigeria’s naira lost significant value in early 2025, monthly on-chain volume across the region spiked toward $25 billion.
That kind of demand is driven by economic necessity.
Remittances and payment costs in Africa have also driven this wave of adoption. The most expensive region in the world to send money to is Sub-Saharan Africa.
The cost of remittance for $200 is triple the target of 3% set by the UN SDG. The figure sits at over 8%.
In 2025, 13 remittance corridors worldwide had costs exceeding 20%. Out of the thirteen, nine are in Sub-Saharan Africa.
In regions where currency values are unstable and remittances are not just slow but also expensive, stablecoin adoption was almost a given.
Stablecoin transactions settle in minutes at a fraction of the cost of traditional channels. For households and people who rely on remittances from remote jobs or families abroad, these weren’t figures on a sheet of paper. It was money no longer being left on the table.
Inadvertently, the regulatory crackdowns, while frustrating for the industry at the time, led to a stronger ecosystem.
The migration to peer-to-peer channels meant exposure to a lot of risk, but because these channels became the main hub for crypto transactions, the infrastructure matured rapidly. Startups that wanted to survive in these restricted markets were forced to build compliance-first businesses rather than growth-at-all-costs platforms.
A parallel market grew despite regulators’ restrictive stances, and as it grew, regulators’ policy approach began to change.
They had to acknowledge the market’s size and its use case. Governments had to admit that the technology they were banning had already become part of their financial infrastructure.
It was no longer prohibition versus permission. It was supervision versus irrelevance.
As expected, policy reversal began to happen, especially across Africa’s three largest crypto markets. It has been striking in both speed and substance.
After a turnaround from its stance in 2021, Nigeria has begun working on its regulations. In 2025, the Investments and Securities Act was signed into law. This rule allowed digital assets to be classified as securities and granted the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) jurisdiction and authority to license and supervise VASPs.
Nigeria went from blocking banks from touching crypto to building a capital markets framework around it.
In a more methodical approach, which Chainalysis lauded as comprehensive, South Africa’s FSCA began licensing CASPs in 2023 under the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act.
This approach enabled more active supervision of crypto activity in the country. By early 2026, the FSCA had received 512 applications, approving 300 and declining just 14.
Reports indicate that the rejected applications failed to meet operational standards. The FSCA also levied over R119 million in fines against unlicensed operators in 2025, establishing that licensing isn’t optional.
Originally published at https://cryptoafrica.news on June 22, 2026.
Why Africa’s Crypto Crackdown Was a Blessing in Disguise for Stablecoins and Digital Payments was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


