On the Atlantic coast of North Africa, Morocco is staging a unique financial experiment. It once had the world's strictest cryptocurrency ban, but at the same time, it is also the country with the highest cryptocurrency adoption rate in North Africa.
While the official iron gate remains closed, the public's door has already swung wide open. From the office buildings in Casablanca to the markets in Marrakech, digital assets are becoming an invisible weapon for millions of Moroccans to fight inflation and break through foreign exchange controls. In 2025, with the loosening of regulatory bills, it is necessary to re-examine this blue ocean with huge potential.
(The author personally traveled to Morocco this month and obtained first-hand information through random chats with passersby and shop owners on the streets of Casablanca, Marrakech, Fez, Chefchaouen, and other places)
If you only look at the legal provisions, Morocco seems like a desert for cryptocurrency. As early as 2017, Morocco's Foreign Exchange Office (Office des Changes) and the central bank jointly issued an announcement explicitly prohibiting the use of cryptocurrency for transactions, with violators facing penalties for violating foreign exchange management regulations.
However, the data tells a completely different story.
According to the "Global Cryptocurrency Adoption Index" report released by blockchain data analysis company Chainalysis, Morocco has consistently ranked first in North Africa and among the top globally over the past few years. Especially during the 2022 to 2024 period, despite being in a bear market cycle, Morocco's ranking remained strong.
Even more astonishing data comes from the holdings. According to estimates by TripleA and several local fintech institutions, the proportion of cryptocurrency holders in Morocco is approaching 10%-15% of the total population. This means that in this country of about 37 million people, millions have already or are currently engaging with crypto assets in some form.
This is not just a game for the rich. In Morocco, the popularity of cryptocurrency shows strong "grassroots" and "youthful" characteristics. This vast user base has grown organically without the presence of formal exchanges, without bank deposit and withdrawal channels, and even under the threat of legal risks.
What market logic lies behind this phenomenon of "the more it's banned, the hotter it gets"? To understand the heat of the Moroccan market, one must first understand Morocco's financial pain points.
Morocco implements strict foreign exchange controls. The Moroccan Dirham (MAD) is not a fully freely convertible currency. For ordinary citizens, transferring large amounts of funds overseas or receiving small commercial payments from abroad is not only cumbersome but also subject to strict limits.
This creates the most real and rigid demand scenario for cryptocurrencies, especially stablecoins (like USDT).
Morocco has a large number of young talents proficient in French and English who are active on global freelance platforms like Upwork and Fiverr, working in programming, design, and translation. For these young people, receiving overseas remittances through traditional banks (SWIFT) is not only slow (usually taking 3-5 working days) but also comes with high fees, and may even lead to frozen accounts due to fund source issues.
Thus, USDT became the best alternative. In Morocco's tech communities and social media groups, "P2P trading" (peer-to-peer trading) is extremely active. Freelancers receive USDT and then use platforms like Binance P2P to convert it into dirhams and transfer it to a local bank account within minutes, or exchange it directly for cash offline. This process completely bypasses the various restrictions of the SWIFT system and has become an important infrastructure for Morocco's gig economy.
Besides receiving payments, making payments is also a major challenge. Many Moroccan merchants engaged in cross-border e-commerce (such as importing small goods from China) found that applying for foreign exchange quotas through banks to pay suppliers was so slow that it could delay business opportunities.
Cryptocurrency offers the possibility of "instant settlement." Although this practice exists in a gray area, using cryptocurrency to settle part of the payment for goods has become an open secret in the business districts of Casablanca.
Real Case: "Airdrop Aid" in an Earthquake
If foreign exchange controls are a long-term driver, then the major earthquake in 2023 was a "stress test" that showed the entire society the practicality of cryptocurrency.
In September 2023, a strong earthquake struck the Al Haouz region of Morocco, causing severe casualties and property damage. During the golden rescue period of the disaster, traditional bank branches were closed, ATMs were out of power or out of cash, and victims urgently needed funds to buy supplies.
At this very moment, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange, Binance, announced an airdrop to Moroccan users.
This was not a fictional marketing stunt, but a real case:
· Binance used user identity verification (KYC) addresses to identify users located in the hardest-hit areas of the Marrakech-Safi region.
· Directly airdropped $100 worth of BNB (Binance Coin) to these users' accounts.
· Also airdropped smaller amounts of tokens to active Moroccan users not in the epicenter.
· The total donation amounted to $3 million.
Although this money could not rebuild homes, at the time, it demonstrated a core advantage of cryptocurrency: borderless, intermediary-free, and instant transfer. Many users quickly converted these tokens into cash through P2P channels to buy urgently needed tents and food.
This event had a profound impact on the Moroccan public. It made many ordinary people who were skeptical of "virtual currency" realize that it is not just a speculative tool, but also a value transfer network that can operate in extreme environments.
Standing in 2025, the Moroccan market is undergoing a qualitative change.
As Morocco's central bank (Bank Al-Maghrib) formally drafts and submits a crypto asset regulatory bill, this North African country is moving from "complete prohibition" to "embracing regulation."
What does this mean for companies going global and investors?
- The opening of the compliance track: As the bill progresses, exchange licenses and custody service licenses will become scarce resources. Whoever can establish a presence first in the Casablanca Finance City (CFC) will be able to capture these millions of already market-educated users.
- The explosion of payment scenarios: Morocco has an extremely high mobile phone penetration rate. Once the compliance threshold is lowered, mobile payment and remittance applications based on stablecoins will experience explosive growth, directly challenging traditional remittance companies (like Western Union).
- Talent dividend: Morocco has one of the best engineering reserves in North Africa. The cost of Web3 developers here is much lower than in Europe and America, but their technical capabilities are not inferior.
Morocco is not the next Dubai, nor is it the next Singapore. It has a unique North African imprint: a young demographic structure, strong cross-border payment needs, and a growing regulatory awareness. The 6 million cryptocurrency users here were not created by advertising, but were forced out by life's demands. A market based on real pain points often has more vitality than a purely speculative market.
For Web3 practitioners, don't just focus on Silicon Valley and Hong Kong. Between the desert and the ocean in North Africa, Morocco, this underestimated piece, might just be the missing corner of the global puzzle.
(Note: The data mentioned in this article references the Chainalysis 2022-2024 annual reports, TripleA global adoption rate data, and public reports by Moroccan local media Hespress on the 2023 earthquake aid.)







