residents may be forced to sell

South Africa just dropped a regulatory bombshell that has crypto holders, gold investors, and anyone with foreign currency checking their wallets nervously. National Treasury published draft regulations on April 17, 2026, and they're not messing around. Public comments are open until May 18, so there's a month to weigh in before this thing potentially becomes reality.

These proposed rules would replace the Exchange Control Regulations from 1961. That's right, 1961. The stated goal is to modernize the framework and crack down on illicit financial flows. Noble enough. But the actual mechanics? They're raising eyebrows and blood pressure in equal measure.

Here's the deal. If you hold cryptocurrency, gold (except coins, jewelry, or artistic items), foreign currency, or foreign bank balances above a certain threshold, you'd have to declare them within 30 days of possession. Then you'd need to offer these assets for sale to National Treasury or an authorized dealer. Payment would be exclusively in South African rand at market value. The threshold itself hasn't been specified yet—the Finance Minister gets to set that later. So everyone's just guessing right now.

Crypto faces particularly aggressive controls. Transactions above the threshold would require prior approval. You'd need to use authorized service providers only, state your purpose for the transaction, and cross-border transfers are basically prohibited without permission. Any crypto not used for the stated purpose? You'd have to sell it.

Enforcement powers are equally blunt. Authorities could search individuals and possessions, demand asset declarations, seize violations, and impose fines up to 60,000. Refuse to comply? You're looking at potential imprisonment up to five years. Violate the rules? Your crypto gets forfeited to the government.

Critics aren't holding back. The regulations are being called overly broad and constitutionally questionable. Privacy advocates and property rights defenders are sounding alarms. Crypto advocates want a risk-based approach instead of this sweeping dragnet. The draft blurs the line between legitimate personal holdings and actual high-risk financial flows, and that's a problem when you're threatening people with prison time. These measures fall under the broader authority of the South African Reserve Bank, which has historically managed exchange controls to regulate cross-border capital flows. The Financial Sector Conduct Authority, which oversees forex brokers and ensures market integrity, may also play a role in monitoring compliance with these new asset reporting requirements. Neighboring countries like Mauritius have taken a different approach, with the FSC Mauritius establishing itself as a regulatory authority for foreign exchange trading activities in the region.

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