Bitcoin & Cryptocurrency Regulation in Brunei
Brunei Darussalam takes a cautious, hands-off stance toward Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. As of 2026 there is no dedicated crypto law, no licensing regime for virtual asset service providers (VASPs), and no recognition of digital assets as money. At the same time, personal ownership and trading of crypto have not been criminalised. The practical result is a legal grey zone: individuals can hold and trade Bitcoin, but they do so without consumer protection, deposit insurance, or a locally regulated marketplace.
The financial regulator is the Brunei Darussalam Central Bank (BDCB), which has issued repeated public warnings that cryptocurrencies are not legal tender and are not regulated by any authority in Brunei. This guide explains where things stand across legal status, the regulator, key laws, exchange licensing, tax, AML/KYC, buying and using crypto, mining, recent developments, and consumer protection. It is general information as of 2026 and is NOT legal, tax or financial advice; always verify the current position with the BDCB and a qualified local professional before acting. See also our overview of crypto regulation.
Legal status of Bitcoin and crypto in Brunei
Holding, buying and selling cryptocurrency is not illegal in Brunei for individuals. There is no statute that bans personal ownership of Bitcoin, and the BDCB has cautioned against, rather than prohibited, crypto activity. However, crypto is not recognised as legal tender, and no business is obliged to accept it as payment. The Brunei dollar (BND), pegged at par to the Singapore dollar, remains the only legal tender.
The central bank has repeatedly stated that cryptocurrencies are not issued, backed or regulated by any authority in Brunei. Anyone using crypto therefore does so entirely at their own risk: there is no recourse to a regulator if a platform fails, an investment turns out to be a scam, or funds are lost.
- Legal to own and trade? Yes for individuals, with no specific prohibition.
- Legal tender? No. Only the Brunei dollar is legal tender.
- Regulated? No dedicated crypto or VASP framework exists as of 2026.
- Consumer protection? None for crypto activities; holdings are not covered by deposit insurance.
The regulator: Brunei Darussalam Central Bank (BDCB)
The financial regulator is the Brunei Darussalam Central Bank (BDCB), the institution formerly known as Autoriti Monetari Brunei Darussalam (AMBD). The body was established under the AMBD Order 2010 and began operations on 1 January 2011; it was renamed BDCB on 26 June 2021 under the Brunei Darussalam Central Bank Act 2021, which replaced the earlier AMBD legislation.
BDCB formulates and implements monetary policy, issues the currency, and regulates and supervises banks and other financial institutions. It does not regulate cryptocurrencies. Instead, it has issued public advisories making clear that crypto is not legal tender, is not under BDCB oversight, and carries significant risks including high volatility, cybersecurity exposure, and fraud. The bank also maintains a public BDCB Alert List of entities that are suspicious or not licensed or regulated by BDCB. The official website is bdcb.gov.bn.
Key laws and frameworks
Brunei has not enacted a comprehensive cryptocurrency or digital-asset law, so there is no MiCA-style framework as exists in the EU. What applies instead is a set of general financial and criminal statutes:
- Brunei Darussalam Central Bank Act 2021 establishes BDCB and its supervisory powers over the financial sector.
- Criminal Asset Recovery Order, 2012 (with later amendments) underpins asset-recovery and money-laundering enforcement.
- Anti-Terrorism Order, 2011 and the Anti-Terrorism (Terrorist Financing) Regulations, 2013 (as amended) address terrorism financing.
- General financial-services licensing, fraud and consumer-protection principles can also apply to crypto-touching activity.
Because no crypto-specific statute exists, the position is largely interpretive: offering exchange or investment services without authorisation could fall foul of existing financial-services rules. Businesses should obtain legal advice before launching any crypto venture in Brunei. Primary legislation can be checked through the Attorney General's Chambers at agc.gov.bn.
Licensing and registration of exchanges (VASPs)
There is no BDCB licensing or registration regime for cryptocurrency exchanges or virtual asset service providers (VASPs) in Brunei. Brunei's 2023 mutual evaluation (conducted through the FATF/APG process) noted that the virtual asset sector was unregulated, with no locally incorporated VASPs.
Because the activity is unsupervised domestically, residents who want to trade crypto typically use international exchanges or peer-to-peer (P2P) marketplaces. There is no domestic authority that approves, audits or supervises these platforms, and no local body can compel a foreign platform to return funds. The absence of a licensing framework is a key reason the central bank urges caution before dealing in crypto. For an explanation of how licensing regimes work elsewhere, see our crypto regulation guide.
Crypto and Bitcoin tax in Brunei
Brunei is a low-tax jurisdiction. It does not levy personal income tax on individuals, and it has no capital gains tax and no value-added tax or GST. In practice this means that, under the current general tax framework, an individual's gains from buying and selling crypto are not subject to a dedicated personal income or capital gains charge.
This does not place all crypto activity outside the tax system. Companies in Brunei are subject to corporate income tax (a headline rate of 18.5 percent, with a higher petroleum income tax for oil and gas), so a business that earns profits from crypto-related trading, services or mining could face corporate tax depending on how the activity is structured. There is no crypto-specific tax guidance, which leaves uncertainty for businesses.
The absence of a charge on individual gains reflects Brunei's broader tax policy rather than a crypto-specific exemption, and tax policy can change. Confirm your exact position, especially for business or large transactions, with the Revenue Division of the Ministry of Finance and Economy at mofe.gov.bn and a qualified Brunei tax adviser. For general principles, see our guide to crypto taxes.
AML and KYC rules
Even without a crypto-specific law, Brunei's anti-money-laundering (AML) and counter-financing-of-terrorism (CFT) framework can reach crypto activity. The framework is administered through BDCB and its Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), supported by the Criminal Asset Recovery Order, 2012 and the anti-terrorism financing legislation.
Regulated entities, including banks, money services businesses and other designated non-financial businesses and professions, must carry out customer due diligence, monitor transactions and file suspicious transaction reports with the FIU. International exchanges used by Brunei residents typically apply their own KYC, requiring identity verification and often proof of address, in line with global FATF standards. Users should keep clear records of their transactions and avoid platforms of unknown provenance. BDCB's AML/CFT overview is published at bdcb.gov.bn/aml-cft.
Buying and using crypto in practice
Because there are no locally licensed exchanges, buying crypto in Brunei generally means using a reputable international exchange or a P2P marketplace. Practical considerations include:
- Account funding. Linking a Brunei bank account or card to an offshore exchange is subject to the bank's own policies; some banks restrict crypto-related transactions.
- KYC. Reputable platforms require identity verification and may ask for proof of address.
- No local recourse. If an offshore platform freezes funds, is hacked, or collapses, Brunei authorities cannot help recover assets.
- P2P risk. Direct trades carry counterparty and fraud risk; use escrow features and verified counterparties where possible.
- Custody. For larger holdings, a private wallet (a hardware wallet for long-term storage) reduces reliance on a single platform.
Crypto is not legal tender, so no merchant is required to accept it, and everyday payment use is limited. Due diligence on the platform, its security record, jurisdiction and reputation, is essential before depositing funds.
Bitcoin mining in Brunei
Brunei has no specific law that bans or licenses cryptocurrency mining, so the activity sits in the same unregulated grey zone as trading. The bigger constraints are practical rather than legal. The hot, humid tropical climate raises the cost and complexity of cooling mining hardware, and electricity is supplied largely from natural gas. Brunei has emphasised energy efficiency and emissions-reduction goals, so large, energy-hungry operations could attract scrutiny on those grounds, and the central bank has explicitly cautioned about the risks of crypto mining.
For anyone considering mining as a business, the key questions are commercial viability (electricity cost, cooling, hardware), how profits would be treated under corporate tax, and whether general energy, business-licensing or environmental rules apply. Brunei is not positioned as a mining hub and offers no targeted mining incentives. Professional advice is recommended before committing capital.
Recent developments (2025-2026)
Brunei's core position has not changed: as of 2026 there is still no dedicated crypto law, no VASP licensing regime, and no recognition of crypto as legal tender. BDCB has continued to issue and update public warnings and to maintain its Alert List of unlicensed or suspicious entities.
On the regional front, in November 2025 Brunei hosted the 8th Southeast Asia Cryptocurrencies Working Group Meeting in Bandar Seri Begawan, organised with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). Officials and experts discussed emerging trends in digital finance, including decentralised finance (DeFi), stablecoins and AI-enabled fraud, alongside taxation, licensing and consumer protection. This signals that Brunei is monitoring international and ASEAN developments, and clearer rules around AML/CFT, investor protection and possibly licensing could emerge over time. Nothing is confirmed and timelines are uncertain, so verify the current position with BDCB before acting. A summary of the meeting is published by UNODC.
Consumer risks and protection
The central risk in Brunei is the lack of a regulatory framework. Users get the freedom to transact but none of the safeguards: no licensing of platforms, no consumer redress, and no deposit protection. The main hazards are:
- No protection. Crypto is unregulated, so there is no compensation scheme or regulator to turn to if things go wrong.
- Volatility. Prices can rise or fall dramatically over short periods; losses can be substantial.
- Scams. BDCB has repeatedly warned about fraudulent schemes; unsolicited offers and guaranteed returns are red flags. Check the BDCB Alert List before dealing with any platform.
- Cybersecurity and custody. Exchanges can be hacked, and self-custody requires careful key management.
The prudent approach is to assume crypto activity is unsupervised, use only reputable platforms, never invest more than you can afford to lose, and consider independent financial advice before committing funds. This article does not give investment recommendations or price predictions.
Official sources and how to verify
Because Brunei's position is evolving and largely interpretive, always confirm the current rules with primary official sources rather than relying on third-party summaries. The most relevant are:
- Brunei Darussalam Central Bank (BDCB) for the regulator's position, advisories and the Alert List: bdcb.gov.bn and the AML/CFT overview at bdcb.gov.bn/aml-cft.
- Ministry of Finance and Economy (MOFE), Revenue Division for tax matters: mofe.gov.bn.
- Attorney General's Chambers for the text of the laws: agc.gov.bn.
For broader context, see our regulation hub and the crypto regulation guide. This page is general information as of 2026 and is not legal, tax or financial advice; verify your specific situation with the BDCB and a qualified Brunei professional before acting.
Frequently asked questions
Is cryptocurrency legal in Brunei?
There is no law that bans individuals from owning or trading cryptocurrency in Brunei, so personal use is not illegal as of 2026. However, crypto is not legal tender, is not regulated by the Brunei Darussalam Central Bank (BDCB), and carries no consumer protection. It sits in a legal grey zone where use is tolerated but unsupervised.
Who regulates crypto in Brunei?
The financial regulator is the Brunei Darussalam Central Bank (BDCB), formerly Autoriti Monetari Brunei Darussalam (AMBD), renamed under the BDCB Act 2021. BDCB does not regulate cryptocurrencies and has issued repeated public warnings about their risks. There is no dedicated crypto-specific law or VASP licensing regime. You can verify the current position at bdcb.gov.bn.
Do I pay tax on crypto gains in Brunei?
Brunei has no personal income tax and no capital gains tax for individuals, so individual gains from crypto are generally not subject to a dedicated personal tax charge under the current framework. Companies are subject to corporate income tax (headline rate 18.5 percent), which may apply to business or mining profits. There is no crypto-specific tax guidance, so verify your position with the Ministry of Finance and Economy and a qualified tax adviser.
Can I buy Bitcoin in Brunei?
Yes. Because there are no locally licensed exchanges or VASPs, residents typically use reputable international exchanges or peer-to-peer marketplaces, complete identity verification, and fund accounts where their bank permits. Since these platforms are not supervised by BDCB, there is no local recourse if something goes wrong, so platform due diligence is essential.
Are crypto exchanges licensed in Brunei?
No. As of 2026 there is no BDCB licensing or registration regime for cryptocurrency exchanges or virtual asset service providers. Brunei's 2023 mutual evaluation noted the virtual asset sector was unregulated with no locally incorporated VASPs. BDCB maintains an Alert List of unlicensed or suspicious entities, which you should check before using any platform.
Is crypto mining allowed in Brunei?
There is no law that bans or licenses crypto mining in Brunei, so it sits in the same unregulated grey zone as trading. The main constraints are practical: a hot, humid climate makes cooling costly, electricity comes largely from natural gas, and BDCB has cautioned about the risks of crypto mining. Brunei is not a mining hub and offers no targeted incentives. Seek professional advice before committing capital.
Last updated: 2026.