Global Citizen Solutions’ Report Examines 22 Countries’ Crypto Friendliness

Global Citizen Solutions, an advisory firm in citizenship and residency planning, released a new briefing entitled Crypto Secure Jurisdictions: Where Crypto Actually Works. It examines how 22 jurisdictions are integrating digital assets into tax systems, licensing regimes, and banking frameworks as cryptocurrencies transition from speculative instruments to regulated financial infrastructure.

The briefing reveals that the defining question for digital-asset investors has shifted from what to buy, to where crypto activity can be legally based, banked, reported, and sustained as global oversight intensifies. Jurisdictional positioning has become a primary investment variable.

Across major economies, digital assets are moving into defined regulatory perimeters. Expanded broker reporting requirements in the United States, licensing frameworks in Europe, and structured regimes across parts of Asia and the Gulf reflect a shift away from ambiguity toward integration.

Global Citizen Solutions’ Global Intelligence Unit, the research arm behind the briefing, highlights the growing intersection between crypto strategy and mobility planning with investment migration increasingly forming part of broader jurisdictional positioning. 

“Residency or citizenship determines how digital assets are taxed, reported and sustained within the banking system,” said COO Artur Saraiva. “As cryptocurrency oversight expands, mobility becomes a structural hedge.”

The study groups jurisdictions by functional role rather than ranking a single “best” location. Institutional benchmarks such as Switzerland, Singapore, Germany and the United Kingdom prioritize legal certainty and established financial infrastructure. Structuring and mobility hubs including Portugal, Malta, Estonia, the United Arab Emirates and Puerto Rico combine regulatory alignment with residency and tax planning frameworks. 

Market and capital powerhouses such as the United States and Hong Kong provide liquidity and scale but with higher compliance complexity. High-growth adoption markets including Brazil and Vietnam demonstrate strong uptake alongside evolving regulation, while migration-led models in select Caribbean CBI jurisdictions integrate crypto into mobility frameworks.

“Caribbean CBI nations are taking a deliberate approach, integrating digital assets within existing AML/CFT frameworks, preserving institutional credibility while adapting to financial innovation,” added Saraiva. “Portugal’s value proposition is personal: residency, mobility, and a tax environment that supports digital wealth.”

As tokenization accelerates and stablecoins embed within payment and settlement systems, digital assets are converging with traditional finance. In that environment, jurisdictions capable of supporting auditability, enforceability, and institutional connectivity are positioned to attract more durable capital flows than those relying on permissive or fragmented regimes.



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