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Home Tech Policy in Africa

Tunisia Drops 50-Year Banking Rule: Tech Workers Can Finally Keep Foreign Cash

by Faith Amonimo
December 5, 2025
in Tech Policy in Africa
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Tunisia Drops 50-Year Banking Rule: Tech Workers Can Finally Keep Foreign Cash

The Tunisian Parliament has approved a measure allowing residents to open foreign currency bank accounts for the first time in 50 years. The vote passed with 69 in favour, 17 abstentions, and 17 against.

This decision breaks a half-century of strict foreign exchange controls that forced thousands of tech workers to choose between working legally or working internationally. For Tunisia’s growing army of digital freelancers, remote workers, and startup founders, this represents freedom from a banking system that never caught up with the digital economy.

Parliament Reverses 2024 Rejection After Industry Pressure

The approval comes exactly one year after Parliament rejected a nearly identical proposal. In November 2024, lawmakers voted down Article 67 of the Finance Bill by a narrow margin of 51 to 48. Back then, Finance Minister Sihem Boughdiri Nemsia argued the measure would encourage speculation against the Tunisian dinar and create money laundering risks.

MP Yassine Mami, who co-sponsored this year’s successful bill, framed the legislation differently. He called it “an important step in encouraging ambitious young people who want to work legally, especially those operating in the digital sector.”

The shift in parliamentary mood reflects growing recognition that Tunisia’s banking restrictions were driving talent abroad and pushing digital workers into legal gray areas.

Digital Workers Trapped Between Law and Reality

Tunisian freelancers have faced a payment nightmare for years. International platforms like Upwork, Fiverr, and various coding marketplaces pay in dollars or euros, but Tunisian banks couldn’t receive these payments directly. PayPal’s limited integration made things worse.

This forced digital workers into expensive workarounds:

  • Using costly money transfer services that ate into earnings
  • Keeping funds in offshore digital wallets of questionable legal status
  • Moving abroad just to access basic banking tools

GoMyCode co-founder Yahya Bouhlel previously highlighted how “going international for a Tunisian startup is almost impossible.” His edtech company, which now operates across Africa and the Middle East, moved its headquarters to the Netherlands specifically to handle foreign investors and fundraising, while maintaining operations in Tunisia.

Startup Act Promise Finally Gets Banking Reality

Tunisia’s 2018 Startup Act earned global praise for offering tax breaks, simplified incorporation, and the promise of easier access to foreign currency. But the banking reality never matched the policy promises.

Even companies with official “Startup Label” status, which theoretically granted foreign currency account rights, faced months of bureaucratic delays seeking Central Bank of Tunisia (BCT) approval. Many startup founders found it easier to incorporate abroad than fight the banking system at home.

The new law aims to eliminate these workarounds by making foreign currency accounts a straightforward banking product rather than a special privilege requiring government approval.

Central Bank Must Write New Rules

The parliamentary vote is just the first step. The Central Bank of Tunisia now faces the crucial task of drafting implementation guidelines that will determine:

  • Maximum amounts residents can hold in foreign currencies
  • Eligibility requirements for opening these accounts
  • Compliance procedures banks must follow to verify fund sources
  • Documentation requirements for international payments

Bank officials must balance accessibility with anti-money laundering standards. The implementation details will determine whether this reform delivers real change or creates new bureaucratic hurdles.

Tunisia Fights Regional Brain Drain

This banking reform comes as Tunisia battles significant talent outflows. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development estimates that 15-20% of Tunisian graduates leave the country each year, creating critical skills shortages in health, education, and technology sectors.

Tunisia produces 10,000 new engineers annually and boasts graduates who are trilingual in Arabic, French, and English. But banking restrictions made it difficult for these skilled workers to participate in the global digital economy while staying in Tunisia.

The foreign currency account reform directly addresses this issue by removing a key barrier that pushed tech talent to relocate abroad.

Economic Impact Beyond the Tech Sector

The reform’s effects will extend beyond the tech industry. Tunisia’s large diaspora community sends substantial remittances home, and simplified foreign currency handling could increase formal money transfers while reducing black market exchange activities.

The change also supports Tunisia’s broader economic diversification efforts. The country is positioning itself as a regional hub for green hydrogen production and clean energy projects, many of which involve international partnerships requiring sophisticated foreign currency management.

Implementation Timeline and Business Reactions

Parliamentary sources indicate this reform is part of a broader package to modernize international payment regulations. Banks now have months to update their systems and train staff on new compliance requirements.

Tunisia’s startup community has responded with cautious optimism. While celebrating the legislative victory, many founders are waiting to see the Central Bank’s implementation rules before making major business decisions.

The success of this reform will ultimately be measured not by the law itself, but by how quickly and efficiently banks can process international payments for the thousands of Tunisians already working in the global digital economy.

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Faith Amonimo

Faith Amonimo

Moyo Faith Amonimo is a Writer and Content Editor at Techsoma, covering tech stories and insights across Africa, the Middle...

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