Crypto License in Singapore (MAS PSA): 2026 Guide

crypto license Singapore — Consulting24
CRYPTO LICENSE GUIDE · 2026crypto license SingaporeCrypto licensing across 15+ jurisdictionsCONSULTING24.CO
In short: This guide explains how to obtain a crypto license Singapore under the Payment Services Act (PSA) from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). It covers the Digital Payment Token (DPT) licence, capital requirements, timeline, and how Consulting24 can assist with the application process.

The MAS Payment Services Act and DPT Licence

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) regulates digital payment token services under the Payment Services Act (PSA). Since 2020, any business providing DPT services such as buying, selling, or facilitating the exchange of cryptocurrencies must hold a DPT licence. The PSA was amended in 2021 to expand the scope of regulated activities, including cross-border money transfers and custodial services for DPTs.

The DPT licence is part of MAS's broader framework to mitigate money laundering, terrorist financing, and consumer protection risks. Applicants must meet stringent requirements: a base capital of at least SGD 250,000 (approximately EUR 170,000), a local presence with a permanent office in Singapore, and fit and proper management. The application process typically takes 9 to 18 months, depending on the complexity of the business model and MAS's review capacity.

Consulting24 (X24Consulting OU, Estonia) provides end-to-end support for obtaining a crypto license in Singapore. We coordinate with local legal partners, prepare the application pack, and advise on compliance structures. For more details, visit our dedicated page at https://www.consulting24.co/singapore-crypto-license/.

The 4 stages of getting licensed1Choose jurisdictionmatch your customers2Incorporateset up the entity3AML / KYC programthe banking key4Open bankingfiat on/off-ramps

Application Process and Key Requirements

The application for a DPT licence under the PSA involves two stages: first, submitting a notification to MAS under the Payment Services (Exemption for Specified Period) Regulations, which allows temporary operation while the full licence is assessed. Second, the formal licence application must be submitted within the exemption period (usually 6 to 12 months). MAS requires detailed business plans, risk assessments, and a compliance framework.

Key requirements include: a minimum base capital of SGD 250,000; appointment of at least one executive director who is a Singapore resident; a strong AML/CFT policy; and an independent audit of the business's financial and compliance systems. MAS also expects applicants to have adequate technology risk management and cyber security measures in place. The regulator may impose additional conditions, such as restricting the types of DPTs offered or requiring a surety bond.

Consulting24 assists with gap analysis, documentation, and liaison with MAS. Our team has experience with multiple successful applications in Singapore. We ensure that your application meets the high regulatory bar set by MAS, reducing the risk of rejection or prolonged review.

Crypto License Comparison by Jurisdiction (2026)

JurisdictionRegimeSetup costTimelineTaxBest for
PanamaSociedad Anónima (no dedicated VASP regime)$15,000–$45,0006–12 weeks0% on foreign-source incomeOffshore / LatAm / Asia / HNW
LithuaniaEU MiCA CASP authorisation$50,000–$120,0004–8 months15% corporate income taxthe European Union
Dubai (VARA)a VARA virtual-asset licence$100,000+ all-in6–12 months0% personal income tax and 9% corporate tax above the thresholdthe UAE and wider MENA region
Canada (MSB)a FINTRAC money-services-business$8,000–$25,0003–6 weeksstandard Canadian corporate taxNorth America
BVIregistration under the BVI VASP Act 2022$25,000–$60,0008–16 weeks0% on corporate incomethe Caribbean offshore market
EstoniaVASP authorisation, now folded into the EU MiCA regime$30,000–$70,0004–6 months0% on retained profits and 20% on distributionsthe European Union

Figures are indicative 2026 ranges. Ask us for a fixed-fee proposal for your specific model.

How to Choose the Right Jurisdiction

Work the decision in this order — customers first, everything else second:

  • Who are your customers? EU retail means you need a MiCA passport (Lithuania, Malta or another EU CASP). US customers mean state-by-state money-transmitter licensing or a FinCEN MSB — consider a Canada MSB or a US setup. Latin America, Asia or HNW clients mean an offshore or territorial base such as Panama is usually the better fit.
  • Do you need a regulator badge? A public-facing exchange chasing institutional partners and fundraising often needs the reputational lift of an EU, Swiss or VARA licence. An OTC desk or token treasury usually does not.
  • What is your budget and timeline? Offshore and territorial routes set up in weeks for tens of thousands; premium onshore licences take many months and six figures.
  • What about tax? Territorial-tax jurisdictions like Panama charge 0% on foreign-source income; EU jurisdictions apply standard corporate tax. Factor total cost of ownership, not just setup fees.

For many offshore-first founders, Panama lands at the intersection of fast incorporation, low cost and 0% tax on foreign-source income, which is why it features so heavily in our work. But the honest answer is that the “best” jurisdiction is the one that matches the four answers above — and that is a conversation worth having before you spend a cent. See our cost breakdown and application process to ground the decision in real numbers.

Banking and Compliance: Where Most Setups Actually Stall

Incorporation is the easy part of any crypto project. Banking is where timelines slip and where under-prepared founders lose months. Since 2023, banks and payment processors worldwide have tightened their onboarding of crypto-adjacent businesses, and they now expect a genuinely professional application — not a one-page business summary. A thin file is simply rejected, and re-applying with the same bank is far harder than getting it right the first time.

Three documents do the heavy lifting. The first is a written AML/KYC compliance program: your customer-onboarding flow, transaction-monitoring rules, sanctions and PEP screening, a named compliance officer, and record-keeping policies. The second is a clear, evidenced source-of-funds file for both the company and its beneficial owners. The third is a coherent business description that explains who your customers are, how money moves, and what volumes you project. Banks approve businesses they understand; ambiguity reads as risk.

Sequencing matters as much as substance. The correct order is: incorporate the operating entity, build the compliance program, assemble the source-of-funds package, and only then approach banking — ideally through a warm introduction rather than a cold application. Founders who approach banks mid-setup, before their file is complete, create the very delays they are trying to avoid. We make direct introductions to banks and crypto-friendly payment rails as part of every engagement, but the introduction only works if the file behind it is ready.

None of this is optional, and none of it changes much from one jurisdiction to the next — the compliance bar is now broadly global. What changes is the appetite of local banks and the speed of onboarding. Our requirements checklist sets out exactly what you need to assemble before you approach a bank.

Crypto Licensing in 2026: The Bigger Picture

Choosing where to license a crypto business in 2026 is no longer a simple cost calculation. The regulatory map has hardened considerably over the last three years. In the European Union, the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) has replaced the patchwork of national VASP registers with a single Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP) authorisation that passports across all 27 member states. That passport is powerful — but it comes with capital requirements, governance obligations and a multi-month authorisation process that smaller projects often underestimate.

Outside the EU, the picture is more varied. Offshore and territorial-tax jurisdictions compete on speed, cost and privacy, while major financial centres such as Switzerland, the UAE and Singapore compete on credibility and institutional access. The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) sits over all of them: its “travel rule” and AML standards now apply, in some form, almost everywhere a serious crypto business would consider basing itself. Jurisdictions that ignore FATF expectations end up grey-listed, which quietly closes correspondent-banking doors for every company registered there.

This is why the question behind crypto license Singapore is rarely “which licence is cheapest?” It is “which regime matches my customers, my risk appetite and my banking needs?” An EU-retail exchange and an offshore OTC desk serving high-net-worth clients in Latin America have almost nothing in common in terms of the right base. Getting this decision right at the start saves you from the single most expensive mistake in the industry: licensing in the wrong place and having to re-domicile a live business.

Consulting24 has guided more than 200 crypto company setups across 15+ jurisdictions since 2017, which means we have seen how each of these regimes behaves in practice rather than just on paper. The summary below is the same framework we use with clients — and we are always happy to map it to your specific model. Start with our Panama vs Lithuania comparison to see how the trade-offs play out between an offshore base and an EU-passported one.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

The failures we see when founders research crypto license Singapore on their own are remarkably consistent, and almost all of them are avoidable. The first is licensing to the headline tax rate. A 0% jurisdiction is worthless if your customers legally require a regulated provider you cannot become there — you will simply have to start again. Decide who you are allowed to serve first, then optimise for tax.

The second is treating the compliance program as paperwork. The AML/KYC program is not a formality to satisfy a regulator; it is the document your bank reads most closely. A generic template downloaded from the internet is transparent to any compliance officer and will sink your banking application. It needs to reflect your actual product, customer base and risk profile.

The third is underestimating banking lead time. Founders routinely budget for incorporation and forget that the bank account — the thing that actually lets the business operate — can take longer than the licence itself. Build banking into your launch timeline from day one, not as an afterthought.

The fourth is ignoring personal tax residency. A company in a low-tax jurisdiction does not erase your obligations where you personally live. Many founders create unexpected liabilities by structuring the company perfectly and ignoring themselves. We introduce qualified tax advisors precisely to close this gap.

The fifth and most expensive is choosing a provider on price alone. The cheapest setup that results in a rejected bank application or a re-domiciliation is far more expensive than doing it properly once. Ask any provider to itemise their fee and explain their banking track record before you commit.

What Happens After You Are Licensed

Getting licensed and banked is the start, not the finish. Every regulated or registered crypto business carries ongoing obligations, and letting them lapse is how companies lose their standing — and their banking. At minimum you will maintain a registered agent or local presence, file annual renewals or supervision fees, keep accounting records, and keep your compliance program live with periodic reviews and updated sanctions and PEP screening lists.

Most jurisdictions also expect you to keep your beneficial-ownership information current and to report material changes — new directors, new shareholders, a pivot in business activity — promptly. Transaction monitoring is not a one-time setup either; screening rules need tuning as your volumes and customer mix evolve. Banks may request periodic refreshes of your KYC and source-of-funds documentation, particularly after a year of trading or a significant change in activity.

This is why we offer ongoing maintenance on an annual retainer rather than treating setup as a one-off transaction. The cost of staying compliant is a fraction of the cost of losing a banking relationship and having to rebuild one from scratch. Plan for it in your year-two budget from the outset, and treat your compliance function as a living part of the business rather than a box you ticked at launch.

It is also worth planning ahead for growth. A structure that suits a pre-revenue startup may not suit the same company once it is processing meaningful volume, adding new product lines, or expanding into new markets. Many of the businesses we work with begin in a fast, low-cost offshore base to validate the model, then add a second regulated entity — an EU CASP, for example — once revenue justifies the cost and the market access genuinely matters. Designing the first structure with that possible second step in mind keeps your options open and avoids a disruptive re-domiciliation later. We map this growth path out with clients during the initial planning stage so the early decisions support, rather than constrain, where the business is heading.

Ready to set up your crypto license Singapore?

Consulting24 has completed 200+ crypto company setups across 15+ jurisdictions. Talk to our team for a fixed-fee proposal and realistic timeline.

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Email mardo@consulting24.co · Phone +372 58155779

About Consulting24 & Mardo Soo

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Mardo Soo
Founder & CEO, Consulting24 · LinkedIn

Consulting24 is an eight-year-old advisory firm that has completed 200+ crypto company setups across 15+ jurisdictions since 2017. Founder and CEO Mardo Soo and the team specialise in crypto, VASP and exchange licensing — from Panama and the EU (MiCA) to Dubai, Canada and the offshore world. We don't push a single “best” jurisdiction; we map your business to the regime that actually fits, then handle incorporation, the AML/KYC compliance program, and banking and payment-processor introductions end to end.

Every engagement begins with an honest conversation about your customers, budget and timeline and ends with a fixed-fee proposal, so you know the all-in number before you commit. We also introduce vetted local lawyers and tax advisors wherever your structure requires them.

Operated by X24Consulting OÜ (Estonian Business Register code 16971898), Põrdi tn 3-63, 10156 Tallinn, Estonia · mardo@consulting24.co · +372 58155779

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the minimum capital requirement for a crypto license in Singapore?

The base capital requirement for a DPT licence under the Payment Services Act is SGD 250,000 (approximately EUR 170,000). However, MAS may require higher capital depending on the scale and risk profile of the business.

How long does it take to get a crypto license from MAS?

The typical timeline is 9 to 18 months from submission of the formal application. The exemption period allows businesses to operate temporarily while the licence is being processed, which can take 6 to 12 months.

Can a foreign company apply for a Singapore crypto license?

Yes, but the company must be incorporated in Singapore as a private limited company and have a local presence, including a registered office and at least one executive director who is a Singapore resident.

What services does Consulting24 provide for the Singapore crypto license application?

Consulting24 offers end-to-end advisory and coordination services, including legal partner introductions, application preparation, compliance framework design, and liaison with MAS. Visit https://www.consulting24.co/singapore-crypto-license/ for more information.

Related guides

Crypto licenses by jurisdiction and topic

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This article reflects 2026 market conditions and is general guidance, not legal or tax advice. Regulations change — confirm specifics with qualified counsel before acting. Consulting24 (X24Consulting OÜ, Estonian reg. 16971898) introduces vetted local lawyers and tax advisors during every engagement.

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