Ghana’s SEC admits 11 firms into a 12-month VASP Act 2025 crypto sandbox, setting the stage for full digital asset licensing across West Africa.
Ghana’s Securities and Exchange Commission just moved. Eleven virtual asset service providers got access to a regulatory sandbox on March 10, 2026. The pilot runs for 12 months under the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025 (Act 1154).
The firms test their products in a controlled environment. Regulators watch risk and compliance in real time. As CoinDesk posted on X, the SEC confirmed companies will operate under direct oversight throughout the period.
Must Read: Ghana Approves Landmark Crypto Law to Regulate Digital Asset Markets
Not all 11 firms do the same thing. Africoin, Blu Penguin, Vaulta, XChain, and Goldbod focus on asset tokenization. Hyro Exchange GH Ltd, HanyPay, and WhiteBits operate as crypto exchanges. HSB Global, KoinKoin, and Bsystem Ltd round out the cohort.
The sandbox does not run as one flat twelve months. There is a split baked in. Firms whose products are market-ready within the first six months can move directly to a full activity-based license. The ones still refining get the back half.
That distinction matters. It creates two tracks inside the same sandbox window. Fast movers get licensed faster. Slower ones stay under observation.
CoinDesk’s March 11 report described the sandbox as sitting at the center of Ghana’s early oversight push. The SEC’s own press release frames it differently. The commission says the pilot lets it validate draft guidelines across every licensing category listed in the VASP Act schedule. That is the actual goal here.
You Might Also Like: Sub-Saharan Africa Is Now One of the Top-Three Growing Regions in Crypto Adoption
Ghana’s parliament passed the VASP legislation after years of pushback from the central bank. Regulators had been issuing caution notices. Then the posture shifted entirely.
West Africa has no unified crypto framework. None. Ghana is now the one setting the standard, and other markets in the region are watching.
The SEC is not just testing firms. It is testing its own draft guidelines. Data from these 11 companies will shape how the commission writes activity-based licensing rules across the board.
Once the sandbox closes, those guidelines go public. Then all VASPs, not just this cohort, can apply for formal registration under Act 1154. The current 11 got first access. The broader market gets its turn after.
You Might Also Like: Blockchain.com Enters Africa Amid Rising Crypto Regulation Shift
Investor protection ties into this directly. So do anti-money laundering controls and counter-terrorism financing standards. The SEC said all three feed into what the sandbox is designed to measure. The press release also tied compliance outcomes to future policy, not just licensing.
The model is not unique to Ghana. The UK’s FCA ran a parallel exercise, admitting four firms to test stablecoin issuance in Q1 2026. Different jurisdiction, same logic. Controlled testing before full rules land.
Worth Reading: UK FCA Picks 4 Firms to Test Stablecoins Ahead of 2027 Rules
The SEC issued this announcement under sections 3 and 208© of the Securities Industry Act, 2016, alongside sections 43 to 50 of the VASP Act 2025.