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Obtaining a Panama crypto license in 2026 demands a clear understanding of a regulatory landscape that is shifting fast. On 13 January 2026, the National Assembly received Anteproyecto Ley N° 314, Panama’s first dedicated fintech framework, which sets out formal definitions, licensing triggers and supervisory expectations for virtual‑asset service providers (VASPs) and crypto‑asset service providers (CASPs). For founders and compliance teams, the practical question is no longer whether Panama will regulate crypto but how to position an application so it survives both the current transitional period and the final enacted law. This guide walks through every operational step: corporate formation, application documentation, AML/KYC programme design, and, critically, the banking‑access strategy that most vendor guides overlook entirely.
Cryptocurrency activity is legal in Panama. No statute prohibits the purchase, sale, custody or transfer of digital assets, and businesses have operated crypto exchanges and OTC desks within the country’s existing commercial‑law framework for several years. What Panama has lacked until now is a purpose‑built licensing regime for VASPs, the kind of structured authorisation framework that jurisdictions such as the EU (MiCA) and the UAE (VARA) have already implemented.
Anteproyecto Ley N° 314 is designed to close that gap. The draft bill, formally presented to the National Assembly on 13 January 2026, introduces several core elements that every applicant must understand:
Until Ley 314 is enacted, Panama’s existing regulatory toolkit, principally the Banking Law (Decreto Ley 9 of 1998), the Securities Law (Decreto Ley 1 of 1999) and the AML framework administered by the UAF, applies on a case‑by‑case basis. Businesses that handle fiat funds may already fall within SBP oversight, and those offering securities‑like tokens may trigger securities‑law requirements. The draft Panama fintech law consolidates these scattered obligations into a single licensing pathway. Industry observers expect that operators who begin preparing now, building compliant corporate structures, AML programmes and bank‑readiness packs, will benefit from faster approval once the final law enters force.
| Date | Event | Practical Effect for Applicants |
|---|---|---|
| 13 January 2026 | Presentation of Anteproyecto Ley N° 314 (Framework Fintech) to the National Assembly | Begin planning around draft definitions; consider sandbox entry and early engagement with regulators. |
| 2026 (ongoing) | Expected supervisory guidance and sandbox circulars from SBP and UAF | Monitor for AML/tech guidance; update application materials accordingly (transaction‑monitoring details, sandbox KPIs). |
| Upon enactment | Ley 314 enters into force | Licensing regime becomes definitive; transitional arrangements may apply; internal compliance updates required. |
Not every crypto‑adjacent business will need a Panama crypto exchange license. The licensing trigger under the draft law turns on the nature of the service provided to customers, not merely on the use of blockchain technology. Understanding which activities fall inside, and outside, the regulatory perimeter is the first strategic decision founders must make.
Purely non‑custodial protocols, software providers that never take control of user funds, and infrastructure companies (node operators, blockchain analytics vendors) may fall outside the core VASP definition. However, AML obligations, particularly customer due diligence and suspicious‑activity reporting, can still attach. Careful legal mapping is essential before concluding that no licence is required.
| Topic | VASP / Exchange (Panama) | Non‑Custodial / Service Model |
|---|---|---|
| Licensing trigger | Handles custody, exchange, fiat on/off ramps, licence required under draft Ley 314 if providing services to Panamanian users. | If purely non‑custodial, licensing trigger may be lower, but AML obligations still apply; careful mapping required. |
| Reporting obligations | Regular AML/CTF reports, prudential filings (if applicable), supervisory inspection readiness. | AML reporting (customer due diligence) and suspicious‑activity reporting; less prudential supervision. |
| Banking risk | High, banks require detailed compliance programme and ongoing monitoring; correspondent access may be restricted. | Lower if no fiat handling, but banks still review risk signals and may de‑risk. |
The following numbered sequence reflects the practical workflow that well‑prepared applicants follow. Timelines vary, but industry commentary suggests that the regulatory processing window, once a complete file is submitted, can range from roughly three to eight weeks, with total project duration (including preparation) typically spanning six to twelve weeks.
A robust AML/KYC programme is not optional, it is the single most scrutinised element of any Panama crypto license application. The UAF, as Panama’s financial intelligence unit, sets the country’s AML/CTF expectations and aligns them with Financial Action Task Force (FATF) recommendations. For VASPs, this means building a programme that mirrors the rigour expected of traditional financial institutions.
The programme must cover the following core pillars:
When a transaction or customer behaviour triggers a suspicion of money laundering or terrorist financing, the compliance officer must file a Suspicious Transaction Report (STR) with the UAF. The report must be submitted promptly, typically within the timeframes prescribed in UAF circulars, and must include a detailed narrative, supporting documentation and recommended actions (e.g., account restriction or closure). Internally, the VASP should maintain an escalation matrix: front‑line staff → compliance analyst → compliance officer → UAF filing. Every step must be logged in the compliance case‑management system.
Securing reliable banking access for crypto businesses in Panama is widely regarded as the most challenging operational hurdle, more difficult, in many cases, than the licensing process itself. Panamanian banks, supervised by the SBP, apply stringent de‑risking criteria to virtual‑asset businesses. A structured, bank‑facing readiness strategy is therefore essential from day one.
Banks in Panama will request a documentation package that goes well beyond standard corporate‑account opening. The following items form the core of a VASP bank‑readiness pack:
Opening a bank account for a VASP is a negotiation, not a form‑filling exercise. The following steps improve outcomes:
If traditional Panama banks decline the relationship, alternatives include electronic‑money institutions (EMIs) licensed in other jurisdictions that maintain USD‑denominated accounts, multi‑currency fintech banking providers, and stablecoin settlement rails that reduce reliance on fiat corridors. Each alternative carries its own licensing and compliance implications, but diversifying banking access for crypto in Panama across two or more providers is a risk‑mitigation best practice.
| Payment Flow | Licensing Trigger | Banking Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Customer deposits fiat (USD) → exchange converts to crypto | Fiat on‑ramp: full VASP licence required; triggers SBP oversight. | Segregated client‑funds account; real‑time reconciliation reports shared with the bank monthly. |
| Customer deposits crypto → exchange converts to fiat (USD) → withdrawal | Fiat off‑ramp: full VASP licence required; source‑of‑funds risk is highest here. | Blockchain‑analytics screening of inbound crypto; detailed source‑of‑funds narrative per withdrawal above threshold. |
| Crypto‑to‑crypto trading (no fiat) | Exchange function: VASP licence required but banking risk is lower (no fiat movement). | Maintain at least one operational bank account for corporate expenses; demonstrate that client fiat funds are not handled. |
| Custodial wallet (hold only, no exchange) | Custody trigger: licence required under draft Ley 314. | Provide proof of asset segregation, cold‑storage ratios and insurance to the bank. |
Obtaining a Panama crypto license is the beginning, not the end, of the compliance journey. Post‑licence obligations are designed to ensure that the standards demonstrated in the application are maintained, and improved, over time.
Key personnel roles include the compliance officer (day‑to‑day AML/CTF programme management and STR filing), the money‑laundering reporting officer (MLRO) if a separate role is mandated, a data‑protection officer (given cross‑border data‑transfer considerations), and at least one board member with documented compliance or financial‑services experience. Sandbox participants will have additional reporting requirements, typically monthly KPI dashboards and consumer‑complaint logs submitted to the supervising authority.
Realistic planning requires honest timelines. Market commentary from consultancies reports processing windows of approximately 20 to 60 days once a complete application is filed. However, the total project timeline, from initial scoping through to licence in hand and bank account open, is typically six to twelve weeks for well‑prepared applicants and can extend to four months or longer if documentation is incomplete or banking negotiations stall.
Estimated cost categories include:
Top ten pitfalls and how to avoid them:
The window for strategic advantage is open. With Anteproyecto Ley N° 314 moving through the National Assembly and supervisory bodies expected to issue sandbox and AML guidance throughout 2026, founders who begin the licensing and banking‑access process now will be positioned to operate under the final framework from day one. The practical steps are clear: define your service scope, incorporate the right vehicle, build a regulator‑grade AML/KYC programme, prepare a bank‑facing readiness pack, and submit a complete application file that anticipates every question. A Panama crypto license is not merely a regulatory checkbox, it is the foundation for sustainable growth, banking stability and investor confidence in one of Latin America’s most strategically located jurisdictions.
Connect with experienced Panama FinTech counsel to begin a licensing‑readiness review today.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Viktor Juskin at LegalBison, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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