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China Crypto Reality

✍️ Written & reviewed by Karel HavlíčekUpdated 2026🛡️ Editorially independent

Quick Answer

China bans crypto businesses but not private holding, and an estimated 59 million Chinese still hold coins through VPNs, USDT and offshore structures. These guides cover what the compliant giants cannot: the actual legal lines, frozen bank cards, OTC safety, capital controls, and the licensed gateways in Hong Kong and Taiwan. Honest analysis, no encouragement to break any law.

China's Crypto Ban, Explained

8 min

Ask three people what China banned and you will get three answers: "everything crypto", "just exchanges", "only mining". The legal reality is narrower and stranger: holding Bitcoin is not a crime, courts have repeatedly treated it as property, yet virtually every business activity around it is prohibited. Understanding the actual lines, not the headlines, matters for tens of millions of Chinese holders and anyone dealing with them.

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Frozen Bank Cards & Crypto in China

8 min

Ask Chinese OTC traders what they actually fear and the answer is two characters: 冻卡, the frozen card. You sell USDT, the buyer's yuan lands in your account, and three weeks later your card is locked by a police bureau two provinces away because that yuan traces back to a scam victim. You did nothing knowingly wrong; your salary account is still frozen. This is the single most common harm Chinese crypto users suffer, and it has its own logic worth understanding.

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USDT OTC Trading Safety

9 min

In the Chinese-speaking crypto world, the real exchange is not an order book, it is the OTC desk: person-to-person USDT trades settled over bank transfers, Alipay and cash meetups, from Shenzhen to Kuala Lumpur to the night markets of Taipei. It works, at scale, every day. It is also where the region's nastiest scams and the frozen-card epidemic live. This is the safety manual the desks themselves will never write.

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Capital Controls & Crypto in China

8 min

Every Chinese citizen can legally convert at most 50,000 US dollars' worth of yuan per year, and none of it may legally buy property or securities abroad. That wall, not the crypto ban itself, explains most of Beijing's fury at stablecoins: a USDT wallet ignores the quota completely. Understanding capital controls is understanding WHY China polices crypto the way it does, and why the pressure never really relaxes.

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Hong Kong, the Legal Crypto Gateway

9 min

Six hundred kilometers from Shenzhen's OTC gray market, crypto is licensed, regulated and advertised on bank buildings. Hong Kong is where China runs the experiment it forbids at home: SFC-licensed exchanges serving retail, spot Bitcoin ETFs, and since 2025 a full licensing regime for stablecoin issuers. For the Chinese-speaking world it is the legal gateway, with a gate that checks residency, not ethnicity.

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Taiwan's Crypto Rules

8 min

Taiwan took the path the mainland refused: regulate, register, supervise, allow. Trading is legal, exchanges register with the FSC under AML rules, and a dedicated virtual-asset law has been moving through the legislature. For the world's most economically intertwined Chinese-speaking market outside the ban, the rules are workable, if you know where the lines and the local traps are.

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Trading from Hong Kong, Taiwan or Singapore?

Licensed venues protect you from the frozen-card lottery. Compare the regulated exchanges available in your market.