Trading crypto in South Africa? Get prepared as SARS plans tighter monitoring, disclosure checks and tax enforcement for crypto traders. Image: Pixabay
Trading crypto? Remember SARS’s plans for stricter tax scrutiny
Trading crypto in South Africa? Get prepared as SARS plans tighter monitoring, disclosure checks and tax enforcement for crypto traders.
13-07-26 14:48
in
Business and Finance
Trading crypto in South Africa? Get prepared as SARS plans tighter monitoring, disclosure checks and tax enforcement for crypto traders. Image: Pixabay


South Africans trading crypto should pay close attention to the South African Revenue Service’s (SARS’s) latest tax plans. The revenue service has published a draft guide that explains how it intends to treat crypto asset transactions.
The Draft Guide to the Taxation of Crypto Assets focuses on South African tax residents. It explains how taxpayers should disclose proceeds from crypto activity and keep records for tax purposes.
SARS has previously indicated that roughly 6 million South Africans involved in crypto activity are under scrutiny. The draft guide forms part of a broader effort to improve voluntary compliance and strengthen oversight of the digital economy.
WHAT SARS PLANS FOR TRADING CRYPTO
The draft guide explains that SARS treats crypto assets as intangible assets rather than foreign currency. A taxable event can occur when a taxpayer disposes of a crypto asset.
The guide covers selling crypto for rand, swapping one crypto asset for another, using crypto to pay for goods or services, mining rewards, airdrops, hard forks and crypto arbitrage. It also addresses record-keeping, provisional tax, income tax returns and disclosure obligations.
To strengthen oversight, SARS has established a dedicated Crypto Revenue Augmentation Unit. Tax Consulting SA says the guide signals enhanced regularisation and monitoring, even though the draft guide is not legally binding.
WHAT ECONOMISTS AND EXPERTS SAY ABOUT THE GUIDE
Tax and digital asset experts have welcomed the draft guide because it provides more certainty, but they also warn that important gaps remain.
Moneyweb reports that Wiehann Olivier, global co-head of digital assets at Forvis Mazars, described the guide as a positive step. However, he noted that it arrives several years late and provides limited guidance on newer developments such as decentralised finance, tokenised shares and crypto-backed lending.
Carel de Jager, CEO of Sixpence, said the guide clarifies that crypto tax is not limited to selling Bitcoin for rand. He stressed that swapping one crypto asset for another, earning staking rewards, mining, receiving airdrops and using crypto for payments can all have tax consequences.
Experts also point to uncertainty over whether profits should be treated as ordinary income or capital gains. Frequent trading may be taxed at marginal income tax rates of 18% to 45%, while qualifying capital gains for individuals can attract an effective rate of 18% to 36%.
Taxpayers can read the Draft Guide to the Taxation of Crypto Assets on the South African Revenue Service website. It appears under the Draft Documents for Public Comment section of the SARS Legal Counsel documents.
SARS has invited public comments on the draft guide until 31 August 2026. Stakeholders can submit comments to [email protected].
South Africans with undeclared crypto income may consider the SARS Voluntary Disclosure Programme to regularise their affairs. Tax Consulting SA notes that the programme can include a separate request for remission of interest.
The broader regulatory direction is clear. South Africa implemented the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) on 1 March 2026. As SARS gains access to more crypto transaction data, accurate reporting and complete records will become increasingly important to South Africans trading crypto.

