Connect with us

Coin Market

Thailand targets foreign crypto P2P services in new anti-crime laws

Published

on

Thailand is beefing up measures to combat online crimes involving digital assets by passing new amendments to several national laws.

Thailand’s cabinet on April 8 passed a resolution approving amendments to emergency decrees on digital asset businesses and on measures for cybercrime prevention, the Thai Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced.

As part of the new laws, Thai regulators aim to strengthen measures for combating digital asset mule accounts in banks, restrict foreign cryptocurrency peer-to-peer (P2P) platforms and introduce strict financial penalties of as much as $8,700 and imprisonment of up to three years.

The new laws are expected to be enforced in the near future, and will take effect after being published in the Royal Thai Government Gazette, the announcement stated.

Key measures to combat mule accounts and money laundering

The new regulations include stringent measures for crypto asset service providers (CASPs), requiring them to collect and report information on transactions linked to online scams and suspend them.

The amendments also empower Thai authorities to block foreign CASPs from providing services to local users, further tightening controls against money laundering activities.

Related: Zhao pledges BNB for Thailand, Myanmar disaster relief

The new laws also have significant implications for non-crypto businesses in Thailand, imposing additional joint responsibilities on commercial banks, telecom providers and social media service providers. The SEC stated:

“Requiring commercial banks, telephone and telecommunications network providers, social media service providers and digital asset business operators to take joint responsibilities for damages caused by cybercrimes if they fail to comply with the standards or measures for preventing cybercrimes as specified by regulatory authorities.”

Restrictions for foreign crypto P2P services 

The new laws explicitly aim to “deter and prevent” foreign crypto P2P service providers, which are “qualified as digital asset exchanges under the Digital Asset Business Law,” according to the SEC.

Additionally, the laws intended to restrict other types of foreign CASPs from providing services to investors in Thailand, the announcement said.

Source: ChartNerd

Thailand’s latest regulatory developments apparently aim to restrict crypto P2P transactions to only local P2P providers in an effort to avoid additional risks potentially stemming from foreign CASPs.

Cointelegraph approached the Thai SEC and crypto exchange Binance for comments regarding the restrictions but did not receive a response by the time of publication.

Meanwhile, local regulators have expressed interest in growing cryptocurrency adoption by approving crypto payment trials in certain cities like Phuket and considering approvals of crypto exchange-traded funds.

Magazine: New ‘MemeStrategy’ Bitcoin firm by 9GAG, jailed CEO’s $3.5M bonus: Asia Express

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Coin Market

Bitcoin mining stocks climb in 2026 as BTC lags behind

Published

on

By

All major mining stocks are up in 2026, with gains of up to 85% as Bitcoin remains down on the year.

Continue Reading

Coin Market

A16z sides with CFTC against states seeking to ban prediction markets

Published

on

By

Venture capital firm a16z argues that state crackdowns on platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket conflict with federal law and hurt market access for ordinary users.

Continue Reading

Coin Market

Riot posts $167M in Q1 revenue as data center arm pulls in $33M in first quarter

Published

on

By

Riot Platforms reported $167.2 million in Q1 2026 revenue, with its new data center business contributing $33.2 million as Bitcoin mining income fell.

Continue Reading

Trending