CARICOM has no unified crypto regulatory framework. Member states regulate individually. Bahamas (SCB DARE Act) and Barbados lead with formal frameworks. The Eastern Caribbean Central Bank launched DCash (CBDC) for ECCU members. See member states.
| Status | varies |
| Risk Score | 30/100 (Moderate Risk) |
| Region | supranational |
| Currency | USD |
| Capital Gains (Personal) | No specific guidance |
| Capital Gains (Corporate) | No specific guidance |
| VAT on Crypto | No |
| Staking Tax | No specific guidance |
| Airdrop Tax | No specific guidance |
No crypto-specific tax guidance available.
| Required | No |
| Framework | No crypto framework |
Enforcement focused on unlicensed operators and consumer protection
| KYC Required | No |
| Travel Rule | No |
| FATF Member | No |
| FATF Status | non_compliant |
| Suspicious-Activity Reporting | No |
Status: Unclear
No specific DeFi regulation
Status: no_rules
No specific stablecoin framework
Status: no_rules
No specific NFT regulation
| Legal | Yes |
| Electricity Cost | $0.15/kWh |
| Renewable Energy | 20% |
| Infrastructure | fair |
Mining is legal across CARICOM member states with moderate electricity costs and limited infrastructure. Tropical climate increases cooling costs.
| Stability | moderate |
| Sanctions | No |
| Corruption Index | 40/100 |
| Banking Access | moderate |
Risk Factors
CARICOM countries generally have moderate political stability and face economic and regulatory challenges impacting crypto businesses.
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Explore IT Services →Last reviewed: 2026-04-13 · Data source: Soken Crypto Legal Map
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