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Saint Vincent and the Grenadines used to be the wild west of offshore crypto. No licensing requirement, no regulator knocking on your door, and a company you could set up in days.
Founders loved it. Regulators loathed it. And for years, the arrangement worked, until May 31, 2025, when SVG’s Virtual Asset Business Act (VABA) came into full force and reset the entire game.
We’ve guided clients through this transition from day one. What we saw surprised us: rather than fleeing to looser jurisdictions, the most serious founders stayed.
They lined up for the new SVG crypto license. And having worked through the first wave of applications, we want to share exactly what changed, what it costs, what the process actually looks like from the inside, and, critically, why the terminology you’ll find across the internet is often wrong in ways that could cost you real money.
If you’ve been in the crypto space for more than a few years, you’ll remember the old SVG setup. International Business Companies (IBCs) could be registered there with minimal friction. No local tax. No mandatory AML program. No regulator asking how your exchange custody model worked. Many founders used SVG as a launching pad, incorporate quickly, get a domain, start operating, and figure out a licensed jurisdiction later.
It worked, until it didn’t. The FATF had SVG in its sights, and the government understood that remaining a grey-listed destination was economically damaging beyond the crypto sector. The Virtual Asset Business Act was enacted in 2022.
The three-year window before enforcement gave existing operators time to restructure. But make no mistake: the enforcement date of May 31, 2025 drew a hard line under the old model.
The unregulated era is over. IBCs are explicitly excluded from the scope of the new regulations. Any company intending to provide virtual asset services in or from SVG now needs a formal authorization from the Financial Services Authority (SVGFSA). This is not optional, and there are no grandfather carve-outs for businesses that “were there before the rules.”
Here’s where we need to slow down, because the internet is littered with misleading content on this topic.
Search for “CASP license in SVG” or “DASP license in SVG” and you’ll find plenty of results. Most of them are wrong in the same way: they’re applying EU or French regulatory terminology to a Caribbean jurisdiction that uses neither.
CASP stands for Crypto-Asset Service Provider. It is the term used under the European Union’s MiCA regulation (Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation) to describe a licensed entity providing services in crypto-assets across EU member states. If you want a CASP license, you’re looking at jurisdictions like Lithuania, Poland, Germany, or Spain, not Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. SVG is not an EU member, does not implement MiCA, and the SVGFSA does not issue CASP authorizations.
DASP stands for Digital Asset Service Provider. This is the French regulatory term used by the AMF (Autorité des Marchés Financiers) to describe registered or licensed crypto firms in France. The DASP framework is entirely French. It has no application in SVG. Content marketing “DASP license in SVG” as a product is, bluntly, misinformation, either the author doesn’t know, or doesn’t care.
What SVG actually offers is a VASP license, a Virtual Asset Service Provider authorization issued under the Virtual Asset Business Act by the SVGFSA. The VASP framework is the FATF-recommended standard, adopted by dozens of jurisdictions worldwide. When someone asks us about a “crypto license in SVG,” a “VASP license in SVG,” or a “Saint Vincent and the Grenadines crypto license,” they are all asking about the same thing: the VABA authorization. The terminology differs; the product does not.
Why does this matter operationally? Because if a banking partner, a compliance auditor, or a regulator in another jurisdiction asks you “what license do you hold?” and you say “a CASP license from SVG,” you’ll either confuse them or raise a red flag. Your authorization document will say VASP. Use that term.

The VABA defines “virtual asset business” broadly. If your business model touches any of the following, you need the license:
The definition deliberately parallels the FATF’s own VASP definition, which means SVG’s framework is interoperable with the compliance language used by correspondent banks, EMI partners, and payment processors worldwide. That’s not an accident, it’s exactly what the FSA was trying to achieve by aligning with FATF standards.
What falls outside the scope? The Act expressly excludes fiat currencies, traditional securities, and NFTs that function purely as digital collectibles with no payment or investment utility. If your business model sits entirely in those categories, you don’t need a VABA authorization.
Also read: The Nevis Gaming Licence: An Operator’s Honest Guide from People Who’ve Done the Paperwork
We’ve walked multiple clients through this process since the enforcement date. Here is the factual picture, based on the VABA and our direct experience with SVGFSA applications:
You must register a Limited Liability Company (LLC) or Business Company (BC) under SVG law. IBCs are explicitly excluded. The entity must have a registered office address in SVG and maintain genuine operational connection to the jurisdiction, a virtual address is not sufficient. You need a real point of local presence.
At least 30% of the board must be independent directors. One director must be resident in SVG. You must appoint both a Money Laundering Compliance Officer (MLCO) and a Money Laundering Reporting Officer (MLRO), and the Compliance Officer must be approved by the FSA and resident in the country. These are not formalities, the FSA reviews these appointments seriously.
This is the number that changes conversations. The minimum paid-up capital requirement is XCD 300,000 (approximately USD 111,000). Additionally, you must maintain a statutory deposit with the FSA of XCD 100,000 (approximately USD 37,000) or an amount equal to 25% of your financial obligations to clients, whichever is greater. Professional indemnity insurance of at least USD 1 million is mandatory. Annual audited accounts are required from the point of authorization.
The VABA is aligned with FATF Recommendation 15. That means a fully documented AML/CFT program, written policies, risk matrices, customer due diligence procedures, transaction monitoring protocols, and Travel Rule compliance for transactions. The FSA will review these documents during the application assessment and can request revisions. Submitting a template policy you found online will not pass.
Once a complete application is submitted, the FSA targets a 90-day processing window. In our experience, “complete” is the operative word. Applications that arrive missing documents, with generic compliance policies, or without proper governance structures get pushed back into the queue. A well-prepared application moves faster. Budget for 3 to 5 months from inception to license granted.
We’d be doing you a disservice if we didn’t address this directly. Local banking for SVG VASPs is genuinely difficult. The major local banks maintain conservative postures toward virtual asset businesses, and you should not count on a local SVG bank account as part of your operating infrastructure.
The practical solution, which we navigate regularly for clients, is EMI partnerships in Europe or crypto-friendly banks in Asia. These institutions understand the VASP framework, can review SVGFSA authorization documents, and are equipped to perform their own VASP due diligence. The SVG license, when properly obtained, opens these doors. The old IBC registration without a license does not.
The key variable is your business model and client geography. An exchange serving European retail clients has different banking options than a B2B infrastructure provider serving institutional counterparties in Southeast Asia.
We map these options as part of our pre-application structuring work, because committing to SVG without knowing your banking pathway is like choosing a car before checking there are roads where you’re going.
We work across multiple offshore licensing jurisdictions, Seychelles, BVI, Panama, Cayman Islands, Bahamas, and others. How does SVG compare now that it has a formal regulatory framework?
The honest answer is that SVG occupies a distinct position: it’s more structured than pure corporate-registration jurisdictions (which have no licensing regime at all), but less prescriptive than EU frameworks like MiCA. Think of it as a credibility step up from a shelf company registration, without the 12-to-18-month timelines and seven-figure compliance infrastructure costs of a full EU VASP or CASP license.
For founders who need a licensed entity to satisfy banking partners, attract institutional clients, or demonstrate regulatory good faith in markets where regulators look for offshore licensing quality, SVG now provides a defensible answer. For founders who need market access in the EU, serve European retail clients, or require passporting rights across member states, SVG is not that answer. MiCA is.
We’ve seen operators make the mistake of assuming a VASP license anywhere is interchangeable with MiCA authorization. It is not. The frameworks serve different purposes, and the appropriate choice depends on your business model, client base, and growth markets.
The VABA gave pre-existing operators a transition period, with a compliance deadline of July 31, 2025. Companies that were operating under the old IBC structure and intended to continue virtual asset activities needed to re-register as LLCs or BCs and submit VASP license applications within that window.
Companies that missed the deadline face the FSA’s enforcement powers, which include compulsory suspension of operations, removal from the register, and potential fines. The FSA can and does conduct on-site inspections.
If you’re reading this as an existing SVG operator who hasn’t yet completed the transition: the time for delay has passed. The practical reality is that your banking relationships, payment processing accounts, and client contracts all depend on your licensed status. Operating without authorization under the new framework isn’t just a regulatory risk, it’s a commercial one.
We’re selective about recommending SVG. It’s the right answer for a specific type of operator, and we won’t present it as a universal solution.
SVG works well for founders who need a regulated offshore entity to support B2B operations, institutional partnerships, or global market access without targeting EU retail clients. It’s a strong option for crypto OTC desks, certain custodial models, and crypto payment infrastructure businesses that operate on a global basis and need a credible licensing anchor outside of the EU’s complex MiCA framework.
The combination of zero direct taxation on VASP businesses, no capital gains tax on crypto activities, relatively accessible capital requirements compared to EU jurisdictions, and a now-recognized FATF-aligned framework makes SVG genuinely competitive in the offshore tier. It’s also a jurisdiction where LegalBison has direct experience navigating applications with the SVGFSA, which matters more than most content marketing about jurisdictions cares to admit.
The SVG crypto license changed fundamentally in 2025. The easy days of informal IBC registrations are gone, replaced by a structured VASP licensing regime under the Virtual Asset Business Act that demands real compliance infrastructure, governance, and capital. That’s not a negative development, it’s the market maturing.
For founders who engage with the new framework properly, SVG offers a credible, cost-efficient path to regulated status in a FATF-aligned jurisdiction.
If you’re searching for a “CASP license in SVG” or a “DASP license in SVG,” stop. Those terms describe EU and French frameworks that don’t exist in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. What you’re looking for is a VASP license under the VABA, and that’s exactly what LegalBison structures and applies for on behalf of clients who know what they need and want it done properly.
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