What changes on 1 March 2026: CARF and CRS amendments South Africa
From 1 March 2026, south africa implements the OECD’s Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) and amendments to the Common Reporting Standard (CRS). According to KPMG South Africa, the rules were promulgated on 28 november 2025 after consultation and take effect from 1 March 2026.
CARF standardizes how in-scope crypto-asset service providers report user and transaction data to the revenue authority. The CRS changes expand automatic exchange of information about offshore accounts linked to South African taxpayers.
Why this matters: SARS crypto reporting, SARB risks, offshore transparency
The South African Revenue Service has said millions of residents hold crypto assets and that technology will drive stricter compliance monitoring. It reported more than 5.8 million holders and plans to use data to match declarations.
This matters because crypto and offshore positions that were difficult to trace will increasingly surface through CARF and upgraded CRS data flows. Detection risk rises for undeclared holdings on foreign exchanges and related entities.
Financial stability concerns also underpin the shift. “Crypto assets and stablecoins pose rising risks to financial stability due to rapid growth, weak regulation, and cross-border flows,” said Herco Steyn, Lead Macroprudential Specialist at the South African Reserve Bank. It has also noted nearly R63 billion externalised via local crypto platforms since 2019 as crypto fell outside standard exchange control reporting.
Immediate impact on CASPs and taxpayers: scope, data, enforcement and penalties
For CASPs, scope typically covers exchanges, brokers, and hosted wallet providers with a South African nexus, including entities onboarding local users. According to TaxTim, required fields include identity and tax residence plus annual totals of acquisitions, disposals, and transfers, including wallet‑to‑wallet where a provider is involved.
For taxpayers, declared income and gains will be reconciled against structured submissions, enabling data-matching and targeted audits. Thompsons Legal Alliance notes that improper disclosure can trigger audits, back taxes, penalties, and even incarceration in serious cases.
Crypto profits remain subject to South African tax rules, with treatment depending on whether gains are capital or revenue in nature. As reported by Coinpedia, the maximum effective individual capital gains tax rate is up to 18%.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin traded near $66,227, with high volatility of about 6.05% and a neutral RSI near 39.79. These figures provide context only and do not alter regulatory obligations.
Compliance steps for individuals and CASPs in South Africa
OECD CARF and CRS data: identities, transactions, transfers
Map all in-scope relationships, KYC identifiers, and tax residencies across platforms, then reconcile acquisitions, disposals, and transfers across the tax year. According to Tax Consulting South Africa, transaction-level submissions in structured formats will support precise reconciliation by authorities. Ensure records cover wallet addresses, transaction hashes, fiat on/off-ramps, and account identifiers.
Regularise past undeclared crypto: disclosure, reconciliation, records to keep
Regularise historic activity by compiling exchange statements, blockchain evidence, and fiat bank records, and reconciling proceeds, costs, and dates. Consider formal disclosure routes where relevant, and retain working papers, valuations, and source-of-funds documentation. Maintain records for statutory periods.
FAQ about Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF)
Who must report under CARF (exchanges, brokers, wallets), and what user and transaction data will be sent to SARS?
CASPs with a South African nexus, exchanges, brokers, hosted wallets, must report identities, tax residency, and annual totals of acquisitions, disposals, and transfers to the revenue authority under CARF/CRS.
How will SARS detect crypto held on foreign exchanges or in self-custody, and does CARF cover wallet-to-wallet transfers?
Automatic exchanges and CASP submissions expose offshore accounts and on/off-ramps. CARF includes wallet-to-wallet transfers when a provider participates; self-custody alone is not a loophole.
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