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ADGM FSRA Authorisation Institutional Guide to ADGM Crypto Licences

By Jonathon Richards
– posted 1 hour ago

For institutional participants seeking to operate virtual-asset businesses from Abu Dhabi, ADGM FSRA authorisation is the gateway to one of the world’s most sophisticated digital-asset regulatory frameworks. The Abu Dhabi Global Market’s Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) grants a Financial Services Permission (FSP) that enables firms exchanges, OTC desks, custodians, crypto funds, and broker-dealers to conduct Regulated Activities involving Virtual Assets under an English-common-law jurisdiction with direct alignment to international AML/CFT standards. Following the June 2025 amendments to FSRA’s digital-asset regulatory framework, including refined Accepted Virtual Asset (AVA) procedures and updated FEES rules, the authorisation pathway is now clearer, more competitive, and more attractive to institutional entrants than at any prior point. This guide provides a regulator-accurate scope of regulated activities, a ten-step application playbook, practical deliverables including checklists, document tables, a timeline chart, and an AVA assessment mini-framework and a jurisdiction comparison to help decision-makers evaluate ADGM against alternative UAE hubs. Whether you are structuring a multilateral trading facility, launching an institutional custody solution, or managing a collective-investment fund with virtual-asset exposure, the information below is designed to move you from strategic assessment to formal application with confidence.

Regulated Scope Under FSRA: Which Activities Need ADGM FSRA Authorisation

The FSRA regulates virtual-asset activities through the Financial Services and Markets Regulations (FSMR), the Conduct of Business Rulebook (COBS), and associated guidance. Any firm wishing to carry on a Regulated Activity involving Virtual Assets within or from the ADGM must hold a valid FSP. Understanding the precise scope of FSRA virtual assets authorisation is a critical first step before committing resources to the application process.

Core VA Regulated Activities

The ADGM digital-assets framework identifies several Regulated Activities for which an FSP is required when the underlying instrument is a Virtual Asset:

  • Operating a Multilateral Trading Facility (MTF): Running an exchange or venue where multiple buyers and sellers can interact to trade Virtual Assets under non-discretionary rules.
  • Dealing in Investments as Principal or Agent: OTC desks, market-makers, and brokers executing or arranging transactions in Virtual Assets.
  • Providing Custody: Safeguarding and administering Virtual Assets on behalf of clients, including wallet management, key storage, and settlement.
  • Managing Collective Investment Funds: Operating or managing funds including venture-capital and hedge-fund structures whose portfolios include Virtual Assets.
  • Arranging Deals in Investments / Advising on Investments: Advisory or intermediary services where the recommendation or arrangement relates to Virtual Assets.

Each Regulated Activity carries its own prudential, conduct, and technology requirements. Firms may apply for permissions covering multiple activities within a single FSP, though the complexity of the application and the capital requirements will scale accordingly.

The Accepted Virtual Asset (AVA) Concept

A distinguishing feature of the ADGM regime is its Accepted Virtual Assets framework. Rather than permitting unrestricted token listings, FSRA requires that every Virtual Asset used, traded, or custodied by an authorised firm must be an AVA. The FSRA Guidance on Regulation of Virtual Asset Activities sets out high-level criteria that a token must satisfy before it can be admitted:

  • Liquidity and market depth: Sufficient trading volume on established, regulated venues to support fair pricing and orderly markets.
  • On-chain transparency: Publicly verifiable transaction history, open-source or auditable code, and clearly identified issuer or governance body.
  • Governance and upgrade mechanisms: Documented consensus protocol, upgrade procedures, and multisig or guardrail controls that mitigate unilateral changes.
  • Custodian integration: Evidence that institutional-grade custodians can safely hold the token, including cold-storage compatibility and segregation architecture.
  • Sanctions and compliance screening: Ability to conduct chain analytics and sanctions screening on the token’s transaction history.

Firms must submit an AVA self-assessment or AVA notification accompanied by supporting evidence before introducing any new token into their regulated activities. The June 2025 amendments introduced a dedicated AVA notification fee, reinforcing the FSRA’s intention to formalise and streamline this process. For a deeper discussion of how to prepare a token dossier, see the Accepted Virtual Asset submission guide.

Prohibitions and Exclusions

The FSRA explicitly prohibits the use of certain token categories within regulated activities. The FSRA Rulebook excludes algorithmic stablecoins (those not backed by verifiable, fully reserved fiat or commodity collateral), privacy tokens designed to obscure transaction traceability, and tokens that lack an identifiable issuer or governance structure. Firms planning to operate in the ADGM should screen their prospective token universe against these exclusions at the earliest stage of their pre-application work.

Regulatory Instruments to Reference

Applicants and their advisers should familiarise themselves with the following primary instruments: the Financial Services and Markets Regulations (FSMR), the Conduct of Business Rulebook (COBS), the FEES Rules, and published FSRA Guidance documents. Together, these instruments define the scope of ADGM FSRA authorisation, the ongoing conduct expectations, and the fee structure for applications and supervision. Firms offering compliance and AML services within the ADGM ecosystem must also map their programmes to FATF standards, as discussed below.

ADGM Authorisation Process A Practical Playbook

The following ten-step playbook details the ADGM authorisation process from initial strategic scoping through to go-live and ongoing supervision. The steps are based on the FSRA’s published application stages and institutional best practice.

Step 0 Pre-Application Intake and Strategy

Before engaging with the FSRA, applicants should finalise their market strategy, select their preferred ADGM legal form, and confirm whether ADGM is the most suitable UAE jurisdiction for their business model a decision that may involve comparing ADGM with Dubai VARA and the federal SCA regime (see the ADGM jurisdiction comparison for a detailed analysis). The deliverable at this stage is a one-page regulatory readiness memo that maps the proposed business model to specific Regulated Activities and identifies the tokens likely to require AVA approval.

Step 1 Introductory Meeting with FSRA

Prospective applicants should request an introductory (or “in-principle”) meeting with the FSRA. This meeting typically involves the founding team, the proposed head of compliance, and legal advisers. The purpose is to present the high-level business model, understand FSRA expectations, and receive initial directional feedback. Securing a meeting slot typically takes one to two weeks.

Step 2 Regulatory Business Plan (RBP)

The Regulatory Business Plan is the single most important document in the application package. It must cover the product offering, target client segments, revenue model, counterparty and service-provider map, AML risk profile, and the custody and settlement architecture. Financial forecasts (three-year minimum), staffing plans, and technology infrastructure descriptions are required. The ADGM FSRA Authorisation checklist and regulatory business plan template provides a twelve-section structure mapped to FSRA expectations.

Step 3 Application Forms and Submission Package

The applicant submits the formal Financial Services Permission (FSP) application forms together with supporting exhibits. Where the firm intends to use Virtual Assets not yet accepted, it must include an AVA self-assessment or notification with a complete token dossier. Corporate documents, shareholder declarations, and UBO disclosures are also required at this stage. See the sample table of required documents below for a comprehensive list.

Step 4 Fit and Proper, Governance, and Senior Manager Approvals

The FSRA evaluates the fitness and propriety of all senior managers, including the CEO, CFO, head of compliance (who typically also serves as MLRO), CTO, and head of custody. Applicants must submit CVs, professional references, criminal record checks, and qualification certificates. Required governance documents include board minutes, a conflicts-of-interest policy, an outsourcing policy, and a remuneration framework. A governance checklist should be prepared early to avoid delays.

Step 5 AML/CTF Programme and FATF Alignment

The FSRA expects applicants to present a fully developed AML/CTF programme that maps to the FATF Updated Guidance for a Risk-Based Approach to Virtual Assets and VASPs. The programme must address KYC/CDD procedures, ongoing transaction monitoring, Travel Rule readiness (including technical integration with Travel Rule solution providers), sanctions screening, and suspicious activity reporting. Firms should prepare an AML programme outline that cross-references each FATF recommendation to the corresponding FSRA rule.

Step 6 Technology, Security, and Custody Evidence

Technology due diligence is a distinguishing feature of the ADGM application. Applicants must present their custody model whether in-house or through a licensed third-party custodian along with detailed evidence of hot/cold wallet controls, key management procedures, and segregation architecture. Supporting documentation includes penetration-test reports (dated within the preceding twelve months), SOC 2 or ISO 27001 certificates, disaster-recovery plans, and a ransomware-incident response playbook. Firms seeking guidance on custody architecture and vendor due diligence may refer to custody and technology due diligence resources.

Step 7 Capital, Liquidity, and Prudential Requirements

Capital requirements under ADGM FSRA authorisation are activity-specific. MTF operators face the highest capital thresholds, while custody-only or broker-dealer permissions have lower but still meaningful requirements. As a general principle, the FSRA requires applicants to maintain capital equivalent to at least six months of projected operating expenses, with additional buffers for market-infrastructure operators. Exact figures are set out in the FSRA FEES and prudential rules; applicants should model these early to ensure capitalisation timelines align with the overall application plan. For more detail, see ADGM licensing requirements.

Step 8 FSRA Review, Queries, and In-Principle Approval (IPA)

After submission, the FSRA conducts a detailed review of the application package. This phase typically generates a series of written queries and requests for clarification or supplementary evidence. Common areas of focus include custody segregation controls, AVA evidence, AML programme specifics, and financial-forecast assumptions. Negotiation on certain IPA conditions such as phased launch timelines, restricted client types, or additional capital buffers is common. Applicants should expect the FSRA review and clarification phase to last six to twelve weeks for straightforward applications.

Step 9 Commercial Licence Registration and Go-Live

Once the FSRA grants the in-principle approval (and any conditions are met), the applicant must register with the ADGM Registration Authority (RA) to obtain the corresponding commercial licence. The RA process runs in parallel with the final FSRA checks. Upon receipt of the commercial licence and the final FSP, the firm is authorised to commence regulated operations.

Step 10 Supervision and Ongoing Compliance

Authorised firms enter the FSRA’s supervisory cycle immediately upon go-live. Ongoing obligations include annual supervision fees, periodic prudential and conduct reporting, AVA notifications for each new token proposed for admission, and participation in FSRA thematic reviews. Firms must maintain their AML/CTF programmes in line with evolving FATF and FSRA expectations and respond promptly to supervisory queries.

Typical Application Timeline

Phase Typical Duration (Calendar) Key Outputs
Pre-application + advisory preparation 2–4 weeks Introductory meeting, RBP first draft, AVA scoping
Formal application submission 1 week Application forms + supporting exhibits
FSRA initial review and clarification 6–12 weeks Written queries, remediation items
In-principle approval (IPA) 2–4 weeks after clearance IPA with conditions
Capitalisation, hiring, and systems build 4–12 weeks Evidence to meet IPA conditions
Final review and licence grant 2–6 weeks Final checks, RA commercial licence
Typical end-to-end (simple FSP: custody/broker) 4–6 months Depends on complexity and AVA approvals
Complex (MTF, multi-activity, or new AVA) 6–12+ months AVA notifications, market-infrastructure checks

Practical Deliverables Included with This Guide

Application Checklist

Item Who Prepares Notes
Completed FSRA FSP application form(s) Applicant / adviser One per Regulated Activity
Regulatory Business Plan (RBP) Applicant FSRA-ready template (financial forecasts, product docs)
AVA self-assessment / token dossier Applicant / issuer Token economics, code audits, liquidity evidence
Governance matrices and authority maps Applicant Board, committees, delegated authorities
Senior manager CVs and references Applicant Fit and proper evidence
AML/CTF policies and transaction monitoring rules Applicant FATF-aligned
Custody architecture and third-party agreements Applicant Custodian SLA + attestations
Penetration test, SOC 2 or equivalent Applicant / vendors Latest 12 months
Business continuity and incident response plan Applicant Include ransomware-incident playbook
Proof of capital / bank references Applicant Per capital rules for activity

Sample Table of Required Documents

Document Category Example Documents / Exhibits
Corporate and ownership Certificate of Incorporation, MOA/AOA, shareholder register, UBO declarations
Governance and policies Board minutes, conflicts policy, outsourcing policy, remuneration policy
Fit and proper CVs, professional references, criminal record checks, qualification certificates
Financials Three-year forecasts, cash-flow projections, bank reference letters
Technical and security Network architecture diagram, custody segregation map, pen-test report, SOC 2 or ISO 27001 certificates
AML/CFT AML policy, customer risk-rating matrix, SAR/TIP reporting procedures
Product and market Whitepaper (if applicable), product terms, custody agreements, market-maker agreements

Asset-Assessment Mini-Framework for Accepted Virtual Assets (AVA)

To help institutional applicants determine whether a token is likely to satisfy FSRA’s AVA criteria, the following three-part scoring framework mirrors the regulator’s own assessment factors:

  1. Legal and sanctions screen (Score 0–5): Evaluate the on-chain issuer’s identity, jurisdictional risk profile, sanctions history, and legal classification. Tokens issued from sanctioned jurisdictions or by anonymous teams score zero.
  2. Market and liquidity test (Score 0–5): Assess 24-hour and 30-day trading volumes on regulated venues, secondary-market depth, bid-ask spreads, and major-holder concentration. Tokens with narrow liquidity or extreme holder concentration score below the threshold.
  3. Technology and governance audit (Score 0–5): Review open-source code-audit results, consensus-mechanism security, upgrade procedures, oracle designs, and multisig or guardrail controls. Unaudited or single-key governance models score poorly.

Threshold guidance: A combined score of 10 or above (across the three dimensions) generally indicates “AVA ready,” signalling that the token dossier can proceed to formal AVA notification with confidence. Scores between 7 and 9 suggest remediable gaps; scores below 7 indicate fundamental issues that should be resolved before submission. For the complete AVA submission checklist, including required evidence types and dossier fields, see the Accepted Virtual Asset submission guide.

Why Choose ADGM for Institutional Virtual-Asset Activity?

Institutional applicants frequently evaluate multiple UAE jurisdictions before committing to an ADGM crypto licence. The comparison table below highlights the key differentiators between ADGM’s FSRA framework and the principal alternatives.

Feature / Jurisdiction ADGM (FSRA) Dubai VARA Other Gulf Hubs (SCA, DIFC)
Legal system English common law (dedicated ADGM Courts) UAE federal / special regulator Varies (common law in DIFC; civil law for SCA)
Accepted Virtual Asset regime AVA (regulated tokens only) + formal AVA notification process Broader licensing; different token-acceptance approach SCA focuses on securities tokenisation
Institutional custody and MTF support Explicit MTF, custody, and funds rules; established supervisory practice VASP licence types; different scope for institutional activities Mixed jurisdiction dependent
Speed to market (institutional) Competitive clear FSRA playbook with IPA route; 4–6 months for simple permissions Rapid for some retail-facing licences Varies
AML / FATF alignment FSRA maps directly to FATF RBA; strong supervisory practice Also FATF-aligned; different operational expectations Depends on regulator

ADGM’s English-common-law foundation, combined with its granular approach to token acceptance through the AVA regime, makes it particularly attractive for institutional participants who prioritise legal certainty, robust custody frameworks, and credibility with global counterparties. For a detailed side-by-side analysis, see the ADGM jurisdiction comparison.

Core Eligibility and Licensing Requirements for ADGM FSRA Authorisation

Meeting the ADGM licensing requirements involves satisfying structural, financial, and operational thresholds before and after authorisation.

  • Eligible legal forms: Applicants may establish an ADGM-incorporated entity (e.g., a private company limited by shares), register an ADGM branch of a foreign entity, or in limited cases coordinate a foreign entity’s activities through the ADGM Registration Authority. The chosen form must be compatible with the Regulated Activities sought.
  • Minimum capital and prudential standards: Capital requirements are calibrated to activity type. MTF operators face the highest thresholds, while custodians and broker-dealers have lower (but still substantive) requirements. As a baseline, FSRA generally expects applicants to hold capital equivalent to at least six months of projected operational expenditure, plus an additional buffer for market-infrastructure roles. Exact amounts are prescribed by the FSRA’s prudential rules and FEES schedules.
  • Fit and proper requirements: Every approved individual including senior managers, the MLRO, head of custody, and CTO must satisfy the FSRA’s fitness-and-propriety standards, covering competence, integrity, and financial soundness.
  • Operational pre-conditions: Custody-asset segregation, third-party custody contracts (where applicable), incident-response plans, sanctions-screening tools, and a fully documented AML/CTF programme must be in place before the FSRA will grant final authorisation.
  • Ongoing obligations: Authorised firms pay annual supervision fees, submit periodic prudential and conduct reports, and must file AVA notifications for each new token they wish to introduce into their regulated activities.

Case Study and Recent ADGM Licences Institutional Signal

Anonymised Case Study: Institutional OTC Desk

An institutional-grade OTC desk specialising in large-block digital-asset transactions engaged in the ADGM FSRA authorisation process in late 2025. During pre-application scoping, the firm identified three tokens for its initial AVA submission and selected a licensed third-party custodian with proven cold-storage infrastructure. The Regulatory Business Plan was drafted over three weeks, incorporating three-year financial projections, a counterparty map spanning six jurisdictions, and a fully documented AML programme aligned to FATF risk-based-approach principles. The formal application was submitted alongside three AVA self-assessments. The FSRA review phase generated two rounds of clarification queries focused primarily on custody segregation controls and the liquidity evidence for one of the proposed tokens. In-principle approval was granted approximately fourteen weeks after submission, with conditions requiring the firm to complete final capitalisation and onboard a dedicated MLRO before go-live. Total elapsed time from introductory meeting to full authorisation was approximately five months.

Recent Public Licence Roundup

The momentum behind institutional ADGM licensing is reflected in high-profile approvals. In December 2025, Binance received ADGM approval to provide global services from Abu Dhabi, reinforcing the jurisdiction’s positioning as a hub for large-scale virtual-asset operations. Industry observers expect the pace of institutional approvals to accelerate through 2026, with the FSRA placing particular emphasis on robust AVA controls, market-infrastructure resilience, and compliance with the updated FEES framework introduced in mid-2025.

Trends for 2026

The likely practical effect of the June 2025 regulatory amendments is a more predictable and streamlined application experience, particularly for firms that invest in thorough pre-application preparation. The FSRA’s emphasis on institutional custody, MTF governance, and AVA transparency suggests that the regulator is building toward a framework that supports deeper capital-markets integration including tokenised securities and regulated fund structures within the ADGM ecosystem.

Next Steps for Institutional Applicants

Institutional firms considering ADGM FSRA authorisation should begin by running the AVA mini-framework against their proposed token universe, drafting the core Regulatory Business Plan, and requesting a preparatory introductory meeting with the FSRA through their advisers. Early engagement with technology and custody vendors and confirmation of capitalisation capacity can materially reduce the total application timeline. Global Law Experts provides confidential licensing assessments and institutional application packages to support firms through every stage of the FSRA authorisation process, from initial scoping to post-licence supervision readiness.

Sources

FAQs

How do I get an ADGM crypto licence (FSRA authorisation)?
The process involves ten key steps: (1) pre-application strategy and jurisdiction assessment; (2) introductory meeting with the FSRA; (3) preparation of a detailed Regulatory Business Plan; (4) formal submission of the FSP application and supporting documents, including AVA self-assessments; (5) fit-and-proper assessments for senior managers; (6) AML/CTF programme presentation; (7) technology and custody evidence; (8) capital and prudential compliance; (9) FSRA review and in-principle approval; and (10) Registration Authority commercial licence and go-live. The full step-by-step playbook is set out in the ADGM Authorisation Process section above.
Any firm conducting a Regulated Activity involving Virtual Assets within or from the ADGM requires an FSP. Core activities include operating a Multilateral Trading Facility (MTF), dealing in investments as principal or agent, providing custody, managing collective investment funds, and arranging or advising on investments where Virtual Assets are the underlying. Each activity carries specific prudential and conduct requirements detailed in the Regulated Scope section of this guide.
An Accepted Virtual Asset (AVA) is a Virtual Asset that has satisfied the FSRA’s assessment criteria and been approved for use within regulated activities. The criteria encompass liquidity and market depth, on-chain transparency, governance and upgrade mechanisms, custodian compatibility, and sanctions-screening capability. Firms must submit an AVA self-assessment or formal AVA notification—supported by a token dossier—before introducing any new Virtual Asset. Algorithmic stablecoins, privacy tokens, and tokens without identifiable governance are excluded.
For straightforward, single-activity permissions (such as custody-only or brokerage), the typical end-to-end timeline is four to six months from introductory meeting to licence grant. Complex applications—including MTF operations, multi-activity permissions, or applications involving novel AVA submissions—may take six to twelve months or longer. The timeline depends heavily on the quality and completeness of the initial submission and the number of FSRA clarification rounds required.
ADGM FSRA licence fees comprise an initial application fee, AVA notification fees (introduced via the June 2025 FEES amendments), and annual supervision fees payable upon authorisation. Capital requirements are activity-specific: MTF operators face the highest thresholds, while custodians and broker-dealers have lower requirements. As a general principle, firms must hold capital equivalent to at least six months of projected operating expenses, with additional buffers for market-infrastructure roles. Exact figures are published in the FSRA FEES rules and prudential schedules, which should be reviewed with professional advisers during pre-application planning.

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ADGM FSRA Authorisation Institutional Guide to ADGM Crypto Licences

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