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Rwanda Crypto Exchanges: Licensing Updates from CMA

Rwanda’s CMA Moves to License Crypto Exchanges as Unapproved Platforms Face Penalties 1

Mandatory Licensing for Crypto Service Providers

Rwanda’s Capital Markets Authority (CMA) has outlined how its upcoming virtual asset regulations will govern cryptocurrency trading, token issuance and digital investment platforms, following Parliament’s recent approval of a landmark bill establishing the country’s first legal framework for digital assets.

The legislation, passed earlier this year, gives the CMA explicit authority to license and supervise virtual asset service providers, oversee token issuers and enforce consumer‑protection standards. It also introduces legal definitions for cryptocurrencies, stablecoins and tokenized assets — a prerequisite for the regulatory regime now being drafted.

With the bill awaiting implementation through secondary regulations, the CMA is moving to clarify how the new oversight system will function.

Jerome Ndayambaje, a digital innovation analyst at the authority, said all service providers and issuers will be required to obtain licenses before operating in Rwanda. The rules will apply to exchanges, custodians, brokers and platforms that convert between fiat and digital assets.

“We are not going to allow all the 9,000 cryptocurrencies that exist globally to operate automatically in Rwanda,” he said. “Every virtual asset will be analyzed independently before it is approved for listing or trading.”

Ndayambaje said cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin are highly volatile and will face heightened scrutiny. Stablecoins and tokenized assets, he added, may undergo a different level of review because they are backed by underlying reserves.

“Stablecoins, which are backed by assets such as fiat currencies or other reserves, are generally designed to maintain stable value,” he said.

The bill passed by Rwandan lawmakers earlier this month introduces a licensing regime for issuers and service providers, alongside penalties for unauthorized operations. The CMA, meanwhile, is preparing to license exchanges, custodians, brokers, and conversion platforms, subjecting each to strict operational, compliance, and consumer-protection requirements.

Officials, in the meantime, are urging Rwandans to avoid offshore platforms and peer‑to‑peer trading until the framework is finalized and licensed operators emerge.

“If people lose money using unlicensed international platforms, there is no legal recourse,” Ndayambaje said.

Once the rules take effect, only licensed operators will be recognized, and conducting virtual asset business without authorization could become a punishable offence.

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