Country guide · Updated 2026-04-28
A spot-only, AAOIFI-aligned halal crypto trading bot for residents of Guinea-Bissau. Local context, local exchanges, USD-only billing — and the same screening framework we apply globally, with Saudi Permanent Committee for Ifta and public Islamic-finance references.
Guinea-Bissau has a Muslim plurality of roughly 45 to 50 percent, primarily Sunni-Maliki with Tijaniyya and Qadiriyya influence, concentrated in the eastern and northern regions among the Fula, Mandinka, and Balanta-Mané communities. The country shares the West African CFA franc system overseen by the BCEAO, and the Conselho Nacional Islâmico da Guiné-Bissau provides community-level scholarly leadership. Our AAOIFI-aligned, spot-only framework supplies the screening discipline that local infrastructure does not yet formalise.
Primary regulator: Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO)
The BCEAO governs the regional CFA monetary zone that includes Guinea-Bissau and has issued unified guidance treating crypto as an unregulated speculative asset rather than legal tender. Personal ownership is not criminalised, and there is no domestic licensing regime for exchanges.
A typical Bissau-Guinean Muslim investor accesses spot trading through a global exchange (Binance, Bybit, OKX, or Kraken), funds via regional bank transfer or mobile-money corridor, and issues a read+spot-only API key. The Conselho Nacional Islâmico and Fula/Mandinka community scholars draw on the Maliki Sunni tradition with regional Sufi influence.
Our subscription is billed in USD via Whop and NowPayments — never local currency. The bot never touches your balance via withdrawal — only spot buys and sells through a read+spot-only API key.
The bot connects via a read + spot-only API key; Withdrawal permission is never granted. You retain full custody control through your exchange’ s standard withdrawal flow. The local options below cover local-money on/off-ramp where applicable; the bot itself runs on global venues.
Note: pricing and billing are USD only. Your card or wallet handles any FX from local money to USD.
Our screening uses an AAOIFI-aligned framework, with Saudi Permanent Committee for Ifta and public Islamic-finance references. For Guinea-Bissau subscribers, this sits alongside local references:
Local references: Conselho Nacional Islâmico da Guiné-Bissau; AAOIFI-aligned framework.
We do not claim to override local fatwas. Subscribers make their own taqlid choice; our methodology page details every gate and decision rule.
All tiers are billed in USD via Whop and NOWPayments. Your card converts your local currency to USD at its own FX rate.
Conservative
$49/mo
Spot only · top-50 caps
Moderate
$69/mo
Asymmetric multi-X targeting
Multi-X
$99/mo
Pyramid target, high-conviction
The bot does not scalp. It targets asymmetric multi-X outcomes — minimum 3% in 4 hours, or 5% in 1 hour, or pyramid-target trades — with structural exits, not micro-tick churn. Every trade is a direct spot purchase (T+0 settlement) with no leverage, no perpetuals, no margin.
The same AAOIFI-aligned framework runs on every coin in our universe. Read the per-coin verdict page for the gate-by-gate breakdown:
Crypto is not legal tender in Guinea-Bissau and is not formally licensed under the regional BCEAO regime, but personal ownership is not criminalised. Bissau-Guinean residents typically use global venues. Our spot-only model fits within the conservative reading of current guidance.
Guinea-Bissau has the Conselho Nacional Islâmico as a community-level body but no formal national Islamic finance authority. Our framework is AAOIFI-aligned, with Saudi Permanent Committee for Ifta and leading Saudi Islamic banks guidance.
No. Pricing and billing are USD only ($49 / $69 / $99). Your card is charged in USD via Whop or NowPayments; FX conversion is handled by your card issuer at their rate. We never bill in local money.
Binance, Bybit, OKX, and Kraken all serve Bissau-Guinean residents and integrate with our bot via read+spot-only API keys.
Never. Every tier is spot-only. We do not place futures, perpetuals, options, or margin trades. This is a structural constraint and matches the conservative scholarly reading that excludes leveraged contracts on grounds of riba and gharar.
Last updated 2026-04-28; Author: HalalCrypto Research Team. Information only — not financial or Shariah advice. Make your own taqlid choice.