
Pakistan already has widespread crypto currency adoption, particularly among young users and freelancers. Policymakers now acknowledge that leaving such a large, informal market unregulated carries serious financial and legal risks.
According to Chainalysis, Pakistan ranked sixth globally for crypto adoption in 2022 and rose to third by 2025. While broader digitisation has lagged, crypto use has expanded faster than regulation, forcing authorities to confront a reality they once sought to restrict.
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The government’s position has shifted gradually over time. Despite earlier State Bank notices declaring crypto trading illegal, the launch of the Pakistan Crypto Council in March 2025 signalled renewed official engagement, even as legal clarity remains unresolved.
Regulatory uncertainty persists because the Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority, formed in July 2025, is still in its early stages. Key frameworks on licensing and compliance are yet to be publicly released, leaving investors and platforms operating in a grey zone.
This renewed momentum has coincided with the growing global influence of crypto-linked political and corporate actors. World Liberty Financial, a decentralised finance project associated with the Trump family, and major exchange Binance have both emerged as significant reference points in Pakistan’s crypto discussions.
International developments have also shaped the environment. Under President Donald Trump’s second term, US crypto enforcement softened, benefiting firms such as Binance, whose founder Changpeng Zhao later became a strategic adviser to Pakistan’s Crypto Council.
Binance has since expanded local engagement through agreements with JazzCash and the Fauji Foundation ecosystem. It has also received regulatory no-objection certificates and partnered with Pakistan on exploring tokenisation of sovereign assets.
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Despite momentum, the true scale of Pakistan’s crypto economy remains uncertain. Estimates suggest a $25bn informal market, largely driven by peer-to-peer transactions, raising concerns around money laundering, consumer protection, and FATF scrutiny.
Regulation is therefore no longer optional. The challenge for Pakistan lies in building a framework that balances innovation with safeguards, ensuring transparency and protecting citizens in an increasingly interconnected global crypto system.