The Bank of Ghana and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) say they will, in the coming months, issue detailed directives and regulatory instruments to operationalise the Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) Act.
The guidelines are expected to clarify application procedures, compliance obligations and supervisory requirements for participants in Ghana’s digital asset market.
Parliament’s passage of the VASPs Bill marks a major step toward the formal regulation of cryptocurrency and other virtual asset activities in Ghana. According to the Bank of Ghana, the law establishes a comprehensive legal framework for overseeing virtual assets and firms that provide related services, with the effective date of the Act to be announced in due course.
Under the new regulatory regime, individuals and entities engaged in virtual asset activities will be required to obtain a licence or registration from either the Bank of Ghana or the SEC, depending on the nature of their operations.
The two regulators reaffirmed their commitment to building a virtual asset ecosystem that is safe, transparent and innovative, while protecting users and safeguarding the integrity of Ghana’s financial system.
The VASPs Act is aimed at regulating Ghana’s fast-expanding digital asset industry by bringing activities such as cryptocurrency trading, exchange operations and custodial services under formal regulatory oversight. The move is intended to strengthen consumer protection, enhance market integrity and curb financial crimes, including money laundering and terrorist financing.
According to the Bank of Ghana, more than three million Ghanaians currently use virtual assets, with an estimated 100 Virtual Asset Service Providers operating in the country. These figures were disclosed in the central bank’s Policy Position on Virtual Assets and Service Providers document.
The central bank has outlined seven key objectives guiding its oversight of the digital asset space. These include safeguarding the stability and integrity of the financial system, protecting consumers and investors, preventing financial crime, supporting innovation while preserving market discipline, strengthening coordination among domestic regulators, enhancing international cooperation to combat financial crime, and addressing cybersecurity risks.
The passage of the VASPs Bill aligns Ghana with a growing number of jurisdictions moving to formally regulate cryptocurrencies amid rising adoption and increasing risk exposure.
The move also reflects broader international concerns.
Already, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has urged African central banks to strengthen regulatory oversight of crypto assets, warning of mounting financial risks linked to the rapid expansion of the digital asset ecosystem.
In its April 2025 Regional Economic Outlook report, the IMF noted that high inflation, exchange rate volatility and surging crypto prices have created strong incentives for cryptocurrency adoption across sub-Saharan Africa.
While acknowledging the potential of digital assets to support financial innovation—including smart contracts, tokenisation and decentralised finance—the Fund cautioned that unchecked growth could undermine financial stability.
“Crypto assets may reduce the effectiveness of capital flow and AML/CFT regulations, facilitate tax avoidance, heighten financial volatility and weaken the transmission of monetary policy,” the IMF warned.
It therefore called for comprehensive regulatory frameworks, backed by strong institutional capacity within central banks to monitor crypto-related activities and enforce compliance.
For Ghana, the passage of the VASPs Act represents a significant step toward balancing innovation with financial stability, as authorities seek to harness the benefits of digital assets while effectively managing their risks.