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	<title>Robert Kirubi &#8211; Bitcoin Magazine</title>
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		<title>Kenya&#8217;s New VASP Law: A No-BS Legal Guide for Bitcoin and Crypto Builders</title>
		<link>https://bitcoinmagazine.com/legal/kenyas-new-vasp-law-a-no-bs-legal-guide-for-bitcoin-and-crypto-builders</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Robert Kirubi]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Oct 2025 12:53:13 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LEGAL]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bitcoin Policy]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Kenya]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p><a rel="nofollow" href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com">Bitcoin Magazine</a><br />
<img src="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenya-Virtual-Asset-Service-Provider-Bill-2025.webp" style="display: block; margin: 1em auto"><br />
<a rel="nofollow" href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/legal/kenyas-new-vasp-law-a-no-bs-legal-guide-for-bitcoin-and-crypto-builders">Kenya&#8217;s New VASP Law: A No-BS Legal Guide for Bitcoin and Crypto Builders</a></p>
<p>This is a clear, candid, and practical explainer for Kenyan Bitcoin and crypto company founders, lawyers, compliance officers, and informed readers seeking a concise legal summary of the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act — what it regulates, what it doesn't, and what you need to know to stay compliant whilst preserving your freedom to innovate.</p>
<p>This post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/legal/kenyas-new-vasp-law-a-no-bs-legal-guide-for-bitcoin-and-crypto-builders">Kenya&#8217;s New VASP Law: A No-BS Legal Guide for Bitcoin and Crypto Builders</a> first appeared on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com">Bitcoin Magazine</a> and is written by <a rel="nofollow" href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/authors/robertkirubi">Robert Kirubi</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a rel="nofollow" href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com">Bitcoin Magazine</a><br />
<img src="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenya-Virtual-Asset-Service-Provider-Bill-2025.webp" style="display: block; margin: 1em auto"><br />
<a rel="nofollow" href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/legal/kenyas-new-vasp-law-a-no-bs-legal-guide-for-bitcoin-and-crypto-builders">Kenya&#8217;s New VASP Law: A No-BS Legal Guide for Bitcoin and Crypto Builders</a></p>
<div id="bsf_rt_marker"></div>
<p>Kenya has <a href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/news/kenya-signs-virtual-asset-bill-into-law">passed a Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASP) law</a> that fundamentally reshapes the regulatory landscape for digital assets in the country.</p>



<p>In plain English: <strong>it doesn&#8217;t regulate Bitcoin the protocol or your private self-custody</strong>. Instead, it regulates companies that touch customer assets — exchanges, custodians, token issuers, investment advisors, brokers, and trading platforms.</p>



<p>The law creates a licensing perimeter around commercial intermediaries and gives regulators enforcement teeth over that perimeter. Think of it as drawing a regulatory fence around businesses that handle other people&#8217;s bitcoin and crypto, whilst leaving individual users and peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions outside the gate.</p>



<p>This distinction is critical: <strong>the Act targets virtual asset <em>services</em></strong>, not the underlying technology or private ownership. If you&#8217;re holding your own keys and transacting directly with another person, you&#8217;re outside the licensing regime. But the moment you start offering custody, brokerage, advisory, or platform services to the public, you&#8217;re inside the perimeter — and you need a license.</p>



<p><strong>Key takeaway</strong>: The VASP Act concerns <strong>commercial intermediaries</strong>, not individual users. Self-custody and P2P transactions remain unregulated, but businesses touching customer assets face full licensing requirements.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">What Parts of &#8220;Crypto&#8221; the Law Does Regulate: The Licensing Perimeter</h2>



<p>Licensed VASPs are any Kenya-registered (or compliant foreign) companies that perform the activities listed in the Schedule to the Act. These activities map to specific regulators — primarily the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) and the Capital Markets Authority (CMA) — and trigger comprehensive compliance obligations.</p>



<p><strong>Exchanges &amp; Trading Platforms</strong>: Brokers, trading platforms, and services facilitating fiat-to-VA or VA-to-VA exchanges. Both centralized and certain decentralized platforms that hold custody or market-make against clients fall within scope.</p>



<p><strong>Custody &amp; Wallet Providers</strong>: Any service holding client coins on their behalf. If you control the keys to customer assets, you&#8217;re a custodian and need licensing, capital adequacy, segregation, and audit requirements.</p>



<p><strong>Investment Advisors &amp; Managers</strong>: Providing advice or discretionary management of virtual asset portfolios for clients. This captures both retail advisory and institutional asset management services.</p>



<p><strong>Token Issuance &amp; Tokenization</strong>: Initial virtual asset offerings (ICOs/STOs) and real-world asset (RWA) tokenization. These fall primarily under CMA oversight as they intersect with securities and capital-markets regulation.</p>



<p><strong>Escrow &amp; Platform Operators</strong>: Services providing escrow functions for virtual asset transactions and certain platform operators facilitating multi-party trades or settlements.</p>



<p><strong>Each activity triggers specific obligations</strong>: licenses, capital and solvency requirements, fit-and-proper assessments, AML/CFT/CPF controls, conduct standards, cybersecurity measures, advertising rules, periodic audits, and ongoing reporting. The breadth is deliberate — regulators want bank-grade compliance from anyone touching customer assets.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Key Definitions for Terms in the Act</h2>



<p><strong>Virtual asset</strong>: A digital representation of value that can be traded, transferred, or used for payment or investment purposes. <strong>Explicitly excludes</strong> fiat currency, e-money, and securities (which have their own regulatory regimes).</p>



<p><strong>Virtual Asset Trading Platform</strong>: A centralized or decentralized platform that facilitates exchange and either (i) holds custody of client assets, or (ii) market-makes against clients. Both limbs trigger licensing.</p>



<p><strong>Virtual Service Token</strong>: Pure utility tokens that are non-transferable and used solely within a closed ecosystem. <strong>These fall outside the licensing perimeter</strong> — a narrow carve-out for genuine utility.</p>



<p>These definitions matter because they set the boundaries of regulatory jurisdiction. The Act uses functional language (&#8220;digital representation of value&#8221;) rather than technology-specific terms, meaning it&#8217;s designed to be technology-neutral and capture future innovations. However, this breadth also creates interpretive grey areas — expect subsidiary regulations and guidance to clarify edge cases.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Who&#8217;s in Charge? Dual Regulators and Subsidiary Powers</h2>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) + Capital Markets Authority (CMA)</h3>



<p>These are the joint lead regulators for VASPs, with activity-based allocation. CBK typically oversees payments, custody, and exchange functions; CMA handles token offerings, investment advice, and tokenized securities. The Cabinet Secretary for National Treasury can designate additional regulators by Gazette notice — so watch for future expansions of the regulatory perimeter.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Subsidiary Regulations (The Real Power)</h3>



<p>The Treasury CS has broad discretion to issue subsidiary regulations that flesh out critical details: stablecoin frameworks, tokenization standards, capital adequacy ratios, solvency tests, insurance requirements, conduct rules, advertising standards, cybersecurity mandates, and more.</p>



<p><em><strong>Expect a lot of the actual policy to be decided here</strong> <strong>— the Act is a framework; the regs will be the teeth</strong></em>.</p>



<p><strong>Practical implication</strong>: The act is deliberately high-level. Founders and compliance teams should track the gazetting of subsidiary regulations closely — those will determine capital thresholds, operational standards, and day-to-day compliance burdens. Early engagement with regulators during consultation periods is advisable if you&#8217;re planning a VASP business.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">What the Law Doesn&#8217;t Regulate</h2>



<p>Outside the licensed perimeter, <strong>the Act <em>does not</em> (on its face) outlaw or require licensing for</strong>:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Owning Bitcoin in self-custody</strong> (your own keys, your own wallet) — this is private property, not a regulated service.</li>



<li><strong>Paying another person directly wallet-to-wallet (peer-to-peer)</strong> — private contractual settlement between two parties remains outside the scope.</li>



<li><strong>Running a non-custodial wallet app</strong> where users hold their own keys and you provide only software (absent other regulated activities like brokerage or custody).</li>
</ul>



<p>The Act explicitly applies to &#8220;virtual asset services&#8221; (the Schedule list) offered in Kenya; it is not a general ban or license requirement on private use of bitcoin or other virtual assets.</p>



<p>That said, unlicensed businesses offering any Schedule activity can face enforcement, fines, and criminal penalties. The line between &#8220;private use&#8221; and &#8220;carrying on a business&#8221; will be tested in practice — habitually dealing for the public, even informally, could morph you into an unlicensed broker.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Pros &amp; Cons (Gloves Off)</h2>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Potential Pros</h3>



<p><strong>Legal Clarity for Institutions</strong>: Pensions, banks, fintechs, and corporates now have a rulebook to engage with digital assets. Licensed on-ramps and custodians with proper compliance make institutional adoption feasible.</p>



<p><strong>Consumer Safeguards</strong>: Fit-and-proper tests, capital adequacy, audits, asset segregation, cybersecurity standards, and conduct rules reduce &#8220;cowboy operator&#8221; risk. Retail users benefit from recourse mechanisms and dispute resolution.</p>



<p><strong>Tax Clean-Up</strong>: The punitive 3% Digital Asset Tax on transaction value was repealed by Finance Act 2025. Kenya now pivots to <strong>excise duty on VASP fees</strong> — much friendlier for savers and long-term holders. Tax targets platforms&#8217; charges, not the full notional trade value.</p>



<p><strong>Pathway for Tokenization &amp; RWAs</strong>: Clear CMA oversight for tokenized securities and real-world assets unlocks capital-markets pilots and enterprise use cases (land registries, trade finance, supply-chain tokenization).</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Real Cons</h3>



<p><strong>Gatekeeping via Licenses</strong>: Dual regulators plus high capital, insurance, and AML burdens can lock out SMEs and open-source teams. Big banks and fintechs win by default; innovation may be stifled by compliance costs.</p>



<p><strong>Subsidiary-Rules Risk</strong>: Broad discretion given to the Treasury CS can tighten rules on stablecoins, self-hosted wallet interfaces, P2P marketplaces, or Lightning gateways later. Policy can &#8220;narrow the pipe&#8221; after headlines fade and public attention wanes.</p>



<p><strong>Surveillance Creep</strong>: Strict <a href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/culture/kyc-bitcoin-and-the-failed-hopes-of-aml-policies-preserving-individual-freedom">know-your-customer (KYC) laws</a> and record-keeping across VASPs, plus mandatory data-sharing with AML bodies, raises privacy risks for ordinary users who rely on custodial rails. Expect financial surveillance to intensify.</p>



<p><strong>Category Error</strong>: Bitcoin ≠ generic &#8220;virtual asset.&#8221; Lumping bearer digital cash with issuer-based tokens invites over-regulation of money as though it were a security or product. The Act doesn&#8217;t correct that fundamental conceptual flaw.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">From a Bitcoin Lens: Acquiring, Saving &amp; Spending</h2>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" width="1024" height="871" src="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenyas-VASP-Bill-and-Bitcoin-1024x871.webp" alt="" class="wp-image-48236" title="Kenya&#039;s New VASP Law: A No-BS Legal Guide for Bitcoin and Crypto Builders 1" srcset="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenyas-VASP-Bill-and-Bitcoin-1024x871.webp 1024w, https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenyas-VASP-Bill-and-Bitcoin-300x255.webp 300w, https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenyas-VASP-Bill-and-Bitcoin-768x653.webp 768w, https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenyas-VASP-Bill-and-Bitcoin-1536x1306.webp 1536w, https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenyas-VASP-Bill-and-Bitcoin-494x420.webp 494w, https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenyas-VASP-Bill-and-Bitcoin-696x592.webp 696w, https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenyas-VASP-Bill-and-Bitcoin-1068x908.webp 1068w, https://bitcoinmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Kenyas-VASP-Bill-and-Bitcoin.webp 1684w" sizes="(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">Bitcoin is treated differently than other digital assets in Kenya&#8217;s new VASP bill.</figcaption></figure>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Acquiring BTC</h3>



<p><strong>Via VASPs (exchanges/brokers)</strong>: Expect full KYC, fee-based excise duty, AML transaction monitoring, withdrawal policies, and proof-of-funds queries. Institutional-grade on-ramps should improve in quality and reliability — but at the cost of privacy and friction.</p>



<p><strong>Peer-to-peer</strong>: Private purchases and sales between individuals remain outside the licensing perimeter, <em>as long as you&#8217;re not carrying on a Schedule business</em>. Be careful not to morph into an unlicensed broker or exchange by habitually dealing for the public (e.g., running a Telegram group offering regular buy/sell services).</p>



<p><strong>Practical upshot</strong>: Retail users can still dollar-cost-average non-custodially via P2P or occasional licensed platform buys; businesses wanting routinized, high-volume flows will likely use licensed platforms to manage compliance and audit trails.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Saving in BTC (Self-Custody)</h3>



<p><strong>Keeping Bitcoin on your own wallet (hardware or software where you control the keys) is</strong> <strong>not prohibited</strong> by the Act. This is private property, akin to holding gold or foreign currency at home.</p>



<p><strong>Corporate treasuries</strong>: Companies can hold BTC on balance sheet, but must follow IFRS accounting standards (usually classified as intangible asset at cost with impairment testing; or inventory if you&#8217;re a market-maker). Create a board-approved treasury policy covering allocation limits, custody arrangements, key management, and audit trails. Kenya applies IFRS; the IFRS Interpretations Committee 2019 guidance (IAS 38 treatment) is the usual reference.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Spending / Paying in BTC</h3>



<p><strong>Direct wallet-to-wallet payments</strong> between two parties (e.g., paying a supplier, settling an invoice, tipping a creator) are not regulated as a VASP activity. Freedom of contract applies; the state can tax income or gains, but doesn&#8217;t pre-approve the medium of settlement.</p>



<p><strong>If you provide a payment service</strong> that sits in the flow of customer funds — custody, routing, conversion, settlement facilitation — you&#8217;re likely a VASP-type business and need licensing. Lightning gateways that take custody or provide fiat conversion will fall within scope; pure routing nodes operated by users themselves likely won&#8217;t.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Constitution, Tax &amp; Company Compliance — Outside the VASP Fence</h2>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Constitutional Stakes</h3>



<p><strong>Property &amp; Privacy</strong>: Self-custodied keys are a form of digital property and personal data. Any future subsidiary regulation that compels key disclosure or bulk monitoring must pass constitutional tests under <a href="https://www.parliament.go.ke/sites/default/files/2017-05/The_Constitution_of_Kenya_2010.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Kenya&#8217;s 2010 Constitution</a>: necessity, proportionality, and respect for fundamental rights (Articles 31, 40). The VASP Act doesn&#8217;t override these rights — it creates a licensing regime for intermediaries, not a surveillance charter for private wallets.</p>



<p><strong>Freedom of Contract &amp; Association</strong>: Two people agreeing to settle an obligation in Bitcoin exercise freedom of contract (Article 36). The state can tax the income or gains, but needn&#8217;t pre-approve the medium so long as no other law (e.g., money-laundering statutes) is violated. The VASP Act doesn&#8217;t prohibit private contractual settlement in virtual assets.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Tax (Post-Finance Act 2025)</h3>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">No More 3% DAT</h4>



<p><strong>The punitive Digital Asset Tax on transaction value is repealed</strong>. Instead, <strong>Kenya now levies excise duty on VASP fees (the platform&#8217;s charge for service)</strong>. This doesn&#8217;t tax peer-to-peer notional flows directly; it taxes the intermediary&#8217;s commission.</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">Income / Capital Gains</h4>



<p><strong>Individuals</strong>: Kenya taxes income; gains may be taxable if you&#8217;re trading as a business or receive BTC for services rendered. Passive long-term appreciation without a realization event isn&#8217;t typically taxed until disposal — but document your cost basis (date acquired, cost in Kenyan shillings (KES), transaction ID (txid)).</p>



<p><strong>Companies</strong>: Realized gains/losses hit profit &amp; loss under IFRS; taxable under corporate income tax when realized. If BTC is held as inventory (e.g., market-making), trading profits are ordinary income. If held as intangible asset, impairment losses are deductible but unrealized appreciation isn&#8217;t taxed until sale.</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading">VAT</h4>



<p>Generally no VAT on money or money-like instruments; but VASPs&#8217; service fees can attract VAT or excise depending on classification. Confirm with your tax advisor once subsidiary regulations land. Excise on VASP fees is already indicated in Finance Act 2025.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Accounting &amp; Audit (IFRS)</h3>



<p><strong>Classification</strong>: Most corporate treasuries treat Bitcoin as an intangible asset (IAS 38). Market-makers and traders may classify as inventory (IAS 2).</p>



<p><strong>Measurement</strong>: Intangibles are typically carried at cost less impairment (no upward revaluation through P&amp;L until disposal), which can significantly understate economic value on the balance sheet. Pair this with management metrics in notes: BTC units held, fair-value footnotes, value-at-risk (VaR) disclosures.</p>



<p><strong>Controls</strong>: Dual-control of private keys, SOC-audited custody providers (if using external custody), board-approved treasury policies, segregation between treasury holdings vs operational float, and regular reconciliation of on-chain balances.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Company Law &amp; General Compliance</h3>



<p>If you offer any Schedule VASP activity (brokerage, custody, platform, advice, token issuance), you <strong>must</strong>: incorporate appropriately, apply to the relevant regulator(s), meet capital and solvency requirements, pass fit-and-proper assessments, implement AML/KYC/CFT controls, comply with cybersecurity and conduct standards, adhere to advertising rules, file periodic reports, and undergo audits.</p>



<p><strong>If you only hold BTC</strong> on your balance sheet, pay suppliers in BTC by mutual agreement, or accept BTC as settlement (converted immediately or held) without acting as a custodian or exchange for the public, <strong>you&#8217;re not a VASP</strong> — standard Companies Act and tax rules apply, but no VASP license is required.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Actionable Playbooks: What You Should Do Now</h2>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">For Ordinary Kenyans</h3>



<p><strong>Learn self-custody</strong>: Choose a reputable non-custodial wallet (hardware or mobile), back up your seed phrase properly (offline, multiple secure locations), and practice small sends to familiarize yourself with the process.</p>



<p><strong>DCA with exits</strong>: Use licensed on-ramps for KES-to-BTC conversions when convenient, but immediately withdraw to your own wallet. Keep detailed records: date, KES cost basis, txid, and wallet address.</p>



<p><strong>Peer-to-peer payments</strong>: You can pay or receive BTC directly wallet-to-wallet. If it&#8217;s income (e.g., freelance work), declare it for tax. If you dispose of BTC at a gain, track your cost basis to calculate taxable gain accurately.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">For SMEs / Corporates</h3>



<p><strong>Board-approved BTC Treasury Policy</strong>: Document allocation limits (e.g., % of reserves), risk management (volatility, custody, counterparty), key management procedures (multi-sig, hardware security modules), and accounting treatment (IFRS classification, impairment testing).</p>



<p><strong>Non-custodial acceptance</strong>: Accept BTC from customers directly into your own wallet, or via a payment processor that settles instantly to you in BTC or KES (minimising custodial exposure and regulatory risk).</p>



<p><strong>Avoid &#8220;accidental VASP&#8221; risk</strong>: Don&#8217;t hold client BTC, don&#8217;t broker or exchange for the</p>



<p>public, don&#8217;t run a trading platform—unless you affirmatively intend to obtain a VASP license and bear the compliance costs.</p>



<p><strong>Tax &amp; audit ready</strong>: Maintain ledgers of BTC units held, adopt a consistent cost-basis method (FIFO, LIFO, or specific identification), and record KES functional-currency conversions at transaction dates for P&amp;L and tax purposes.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">For Builders &amp; Founders</h3>



<p><strong>Decide your regulatory posture</strong>: Non-custodial software (safer, outside licensing perimeter) vs custodial/market-facing VASP (licensing roadmap, capital requirements, ongoing audits, and compliance overhead).</p>



<p><strong>Design for self-custody first</strong>: Prioritize user control of keys, composability with Lightning and other open protocols, and clean data trails users can export for tax reporting and auditability.</p>



<p><strong>Engage regulators early</strong>: If pursuing a VASP license, begin dialogue with CBK/CMA during the application drafting phase. Understand their expectations on capital, systems, AML controls, and governance before you&#8217;re too far down the build path.</p>



<p><strong>Stay agile on subsidiary regs</strong>: Monitor Gazette notices and public consultations — subsidiary regulations will define day-to-day compliance burdens, stablecoin rules, and emerging areas like Lightning or DeFi interfaces.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Bottom Line: What This Really Means</h2>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p><strong><em>This law licenses intermediaries; it does not outlaw Bitcoin self-custody or peer-to-peer use.</em></strong></p>
</blockquote>



<p>The VASP Act will make bank-grade, compliant on-ramps more available — institutional capital can now flow into licensed custodians and exchanges with regulatory certainty. That&#8217;s a win for legitimacy, consumer protection, and formalizing the industry.</p>



<p>But <strong>it also centralizes power in licensed platforms</strong>, with all the usual trade-offs: higher fees, mandatory KYC, financial surveillance, slower iteration due to compliance overhead, and a bias towards incumbents (banks, large fintechs) who can afford the capital and legal costs. Smaller, open-source teams and peer-to-peer marketplaces face an uphill battle.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">For Citizens &amp; SMEs</h3>



<p>The winning strategy is simple: learn self-custody, document your flows meticulously (dates, amounts,cost basis, txids), and don&#8217;t become a VASP by accident. Keep your Bitcoin on your own keys, transact peer-to-peer where possible, and use licensed platforms only when necessary for fiat conversion or institutional compliance.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">For Builders Choosing the VASP Route</h3>



<p>Assume bank-like compliance from day one: capital adequacy, fit-and-proper directors, AML/KYC systems (transaction monitoring, sanctions screening, suspicious-activity reporting), cybersecurity frameworks (ISO 27001, penetration testing), segregated client assets, external audits, and ongoing regulatory reporting. Budget for legal and compliance personnel; this isn&#8217;t a lean startup play.</p>



<p><strong>The VASP Act is a double-edged sword</strong>: it legitimizes the industry and invites institutional participation, but it also imposes gatekeeping and surveillance that can undermine the open, permissionless ethos of Bitcoin. Your move depends on your goals — freedom and sovereignty, or legitimacy and institutional access.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Sources &amp; Further Reading</h2>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Official Bill Text</h3>



<p><a href="https://www.treasury.go.ke/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/VIRTUAL-ASSET-SERVICE-PROVIDERS-BILL-2024.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Virtual Asset Service Providers Act (Kenya)</a>: Definitions (Part II), scope of application (Part III), Schedule of regulated activities, regulator mapping (CBK/CMA allocation), licensing framework, capital and solvency requirements, fit-and-proper standards, AML/CFT/CPF obligations, conduct and advertising rules, and enforcement provisions.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Finance Act 2025 (Tax Changes)</h3>



<p>Repeal of the 3% Digital Asset Tax on transaction value; introduction of excise duty on VASP service fees. Confirms shift from taxing notional trade value to taxing intermediary charges — much friendlier for long-term holders and peer-to-peer users.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Passage &amp; Dual-Regulator Design</h3>



<p>Reuters, Parliament of Kenya official records, and press coverage of the Bill&#8217;s passage and pending/reported presidential assent. Commentary on the CBK/CMA co-ordination mechanism and the Cabinet Secretary&#8217;s subsidiary regulation powers.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">IFRS Accounting Guidance</h3>



<p>IFRS Interpretations Committee (2019) guidance on holdings of cryptocurrencies: IAS 38 (intangible assets) treatment, cost-less-impairment model, disclosure requirements. Kenya applies IFRS for corporate financial reporting; this is the authoritative reference for balance-sheet classification of Bitcoin and other virtual assets.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Constitutional Framework</h3>



<p>Constitution of Kenya 2010: Articles 31 (privacy), 36 (freedom of association), 40 (property rights), and 47 (fair administrative action). These provisions anchor individual rights against over-reach in subsidiary regulations (e.g., compelled key disclosure, bulk surveillance without judicial oversight).</p>



<p><em>This guide is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Consult a qualified Kenyan lawyer, tax advisor, or accountant for your specific circumstances. Law and regulations evolve; verify current status before acting.</em></p>
<p>This post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/legal/kenyas-new-vasp-law-a-no-bs-legal-guide-for-bitcoin-and-crypto-builders">Kenya&#8217;s New VASP Law: A No-BS Legal Guide for Bitcoin and Crypto Builders</a> first appeared on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com">Bitcoin Magazine</a> and is written by <a rel="nofollow" href="https://bitcoinmagazine.com/authors/robertkirubi">Robert Kirubi</a>.</p>
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