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Panama’s fintech landscape shifted decisively in early 2026 when two instruments landed almost simultaneously: Draft Law No. 314, which proposes the country’s first dedicated licensing framework for virtual‑asset service providers, payment‑service providers and electronic‑money issuers, and SBP Rule 1‑2026, published by the Superintendencia de Bancos de Panamá (SBP) on 27 January 2026, which tightens anti‑money‑laundering and counter‑terrorism‑financing (AML/CTF) obligations across every entity that touches the banking system. For any fintech founder, general counsel or compliance officer searching for experienced fintech lawyers in Panama, the practical question is no longer whether regulation is coming but which licence applies, how to keep bank accounts open, and what AML controls to build right now.
This playbook translates both instruments into an operational roadmap, covering the licensing decision tree, a bank‑access engagement script, AML program minimums and payment‑flow remediation steps that Panamanian banks will expect to see.
If you read nothing else, act on these eight items before the regulatory window narrows further:
Practitioner tip: If you only do one thing, complete the payment‑flow map. It is the single document every bank relationship manager will ask for first, and it forces your team to confront gaps in transaction monitoring before the regulator does.
Panama has historically operated without a comprehensive licensing regime for fintechs. Multiple bills were introduced in preceding legislative sessions, but none were enacted. Draft Law No.314 represents the most detailed attempt yet, while SBP Rule 1‑2026 addresses the immediate AML gap that banks and regulators face today. Together they reshape the obligations of every fintech operating in or routing payments through Panama.
| Date | Instrument | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 27 January 2026 | SBP Rule 1‑2026 (Acuerdo 1‑2026) | Immediate: banks must apply enhanced AML/CTF risk‑mitigation measures; fintechs banking in Panama must comply or risk account restrictions. |
| Q1 2026 (introduced) | Draft Law No.314 | Under legislative review: creates VASP/PSP/EMI categories, public registry and licensing obligations. Not yet enacted. |
| Expected H2 2026 | Implementing regulations (SBP / Ministry) | Industry observers expect detailed secondary regulations covering capital requirements, fees and registry procedures once the law passes. |
Verify current status at: SBP, Rule 1‑2026
The Superintendencia de Bancos de Panamá (SBP) supervises banks, trust companies and, under the proposed regime, licensed fintechs that interact with the banking system. The Asamblea Nacional is responsible for enacting Draft Law No.314 into statute. Once enacted, the likely practical effect will be shared supervision between the SBP (for AML and prudential matters) and a designated fintech authority or the existing Ministry of Commerce framework for registry operations. The Cámara Fintech de Panamá serves as the industry’s coordination body and has been actively contributing to regulatory design.
Not every fintech needs the same authorisation. The licensing decision tree below walks through the key questions that determine which category, and which set of obligations, applies to a given business model.
If your platform exchanges virtual assets for fiat (or for other virtual assets), holds virtual assets in custody on behalf of clients, or facilitates peer‑to‑peer transfers, Draft Law No.314 treats you as a VASP. Operators must obtain authorisation and be listed in the proposed public registry before conducting these activities. The draft also captures entities that participate in the issuance or initial sale of virtual assets, meaning token issuers and launchpad platforms fall within scope.
Fintechs that initiate payment transactions, issue stored‑value products or operate digital wallets denominated in fiat currency are likely classified as PSPs or EMIs. The key distinction from a VASP is that PSPs and EMIs deal primarily in fiat or fiat‑equivalent electronic money rather than virtual assets. Prudential requirements for EMIs are expected to include safeguarding obligations, client funds must be segregated in trust accounts held at licensed banks, and minimum capital thresholds whose exact figures will be set in secondary regulations.
Pure software providers, blockchain infrastructure developers and analytics firms that never take custody of client funds or process payments may not require licensing under Draft Law No.314. However, they could still be subject to AML obligations if they provide services to VASPs or PSPs. Traditional money‑service businesses (remittance houses, FX bureaux) continue to operate under existing MSB registration requirements and must comply with SBP Rule 1‑2026 independently.
| Entity Type | Activities Covered | Key Regulatory Obligations |
|---|---|---|
| VASP | Exchange, custody, transfer of virtual assets; participation in token issuance | Registration/licence, AML program, suspicious‑activity reporting, public‑registry listing, compliance officer, independent audit |
| PSP / EMI | Payment initiation, e‑money issuance, settlement, stored‑value wallets | Licensing, safeguarding of client funds in segregated accounts, AML controls, prudential capital requirements |
| Traditional MSB / Processor | Remittance, fiat FX, payment processing (non‑virtual‑asset) | MSB registration, AML obligations under existing law, bank due‑diligence cooperation |
For a deeper dive into crypto‑specific registration, see the Global Law Experts guide to crypto licensing in Panama.
Whether you are applying as a VASP, PSP or EMI, the documentation requirements share a common core. Preparing these items in advance dramatically shortens the review cycle and reduces the risk of rejection.
Early indications suggest a licensing review could take 90 to 180 days from submission of a complete application, depending on the licence category and the regulator’s backlog. Fee schedules have not been finalised in the draft law; secondary regulations are expected to set initial application fees and annual renewal charges. Fintech founders should budget for both legal counsel fees and any capital‑deposit requirements during this period.
To discuss licensing readiness, browse the Global Law Experts lawyer directory and filter for Panama FinTech specialists.
Securing, and retaining, a banking relationship is the single largest operational challenge facing fintechs in Panama. Banks are under direct pressure from SBP Rule 1‑2026 and from their own correspondent‑banking partners to demonstrate robust AML controls over fintech clients. The following playbook translates that pressure into a step‑by‑step engagement strategy.
Before approaching any bank, conduct an internal gap assessment. Compare your current AML program, corporate governance and payment‑flow documentation against the checklist in the licensing section above. Fix gaps before the first meeting, banks form lasting impressions during initial due diligence.
Banks will ask for a detailed diagram showing every leg of your payment flow: where funds originate, how they convert (fiat to virtual asset or vice versa), which intermediaries are involved, where settlement occurs and where reconciliation breaks could hide suspicious activity. Produce a flow chart that covers inbound channels, conversion or processing logic, and outbound disbursement. Identify the AML control point at each stage.
Assemble a single binder (physical and digital) containing your AML manual, beneficial‑ownership chart, compliance‑officer appointment letter, latest independent audit report, transaction‑monitoring methodology and sample suspicious‑activity report (SAR) form. Banks increasingly expect this package before they will schedule an onboarding meeting.
Open with a concise executive summary: who you are, what licence you hold or are applying for, how many customers you serve, your average monthly transaction volume and how your AML controls exceed the minimum SBP requirements. Close by offering a walkthrough of your payment‑flow map and asking for the bank’s specific due‑diligence questionnaire.
Panamanian banks maintain relationships with international correspondent banks that impose their own risk appetites. To mitigate correspondent banking risk, demonstrate that your product does not involve anonymous transactions, that you apply enhanced due diligence to high‑risk jurisdictions and that you can provide real‑time transaction data on request. Offering the bank a staged access model, starting with lower transaction limits that increase as your compliance track record builds, can make the difference between approval and rejection.
| Document | Format | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate organogram & UBO chart | PDF / Visio | Show every entity to the ultimate natural person |
| AML/CTF policy manual | PDF (versioned) | Must reference SBP Rule 1‑2026 explicitly |
| Payment‑flow map | Visio / Lucidchart | Label each AML control point |
| Transaction‑monitoring methodology | Include alert thresholds and escalation procedures | |
| Independent AML audit report | Dated within the last 12 months | |
| Proof of licence or application receipt | PDF / official letter | From SBP or designated authority |
| Audited financial statements | Most recent fiscal year |
For background on why crypto and fintech businesses need licensing as a precondition for bank access, see Why you need a crypto licence, and how to get it right.
SBP Rule 1‑2026 introduces regulatory adjustments designed to reinforce the prevention, detection and mitigation of risks associated with money laundering, terrorism financing and proliferation financing. For fintech lawyers in Panama advising clients, the rule effectively sets the floor that every licensed fintech’s AML program must meet, and banks will treat it as a ceiling test during onboarding.
| Customer Category | CDD Level | Key Requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Natural person, low‑risk jurisdiction | Standard CDD | Government‑issued ID, proof of address, source‑of‑funds declaration |
| Corporate client | Standard CDD + UBO identification | Certificate of incorporation, shareholder register, UBO verified to natural person, board resolution authorising relationship |
| PEP, high‑risk jurisdiction, complex structure | Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) | All standard CDD plus senior‑management approval, ongoing source‑of‑wealth verification, increased transaction monitoring frequency |
An effective transaction‑monitoring program under SBP Rule 1‑2026 should include, at minimum:
Every alert must be investigated within a defined timeframe, documented in a case‑management system and escalated to the compliance officer where a SAR filing may be warranted. SBP Rule 1‑2026 mandates that suspicious‑activity reports be filed with the Unidad de Análisis Financiero (UAF) within the prescribed window. Recordkeeping must extend for a minimum of five years from the end of the business relationship.
The rule reinforces the expectation of an annual independent review of the AML program, conducted by a qualified third party with no conflicts of interest. All staff handling customer accounts or transaction processing must receive AML/CTF training at onboarding and at least annually thereafter, with documented attendance records.
Payment‑flow mapping is not just a compliance document, it is an operational diagnostic tool. For CTOs and compliance officers building or remediating payment infrastructure under Panama’s 2026 rules, the following items require attention:
At every stage, the payment‑flow map must identify the specific AML control (CDD check, sanctions screening, transaction‑monitoring rule) that applies. Gaps at any point are the first thing a bank examiner or SBP auditor will flag.
Approaching a bank without preparation invites a swift rejection. The following template provides a starting framework for the initial engagement email:
Subject line: Fintech Onboarding Request, [Company Name], Licensed VASP/PSP Application [Reference Number]
Body structure:
Red flags banks will look for, and how to address them:
The convergence of Draft Law No.314 and SBP Rule 1‑2026 means that Panama’s fintech market is moving from a permissive, unregulated environment to one that demands licensing, robust AML controls and proactive bank engagement. For fintech lawyers in Panama and the companies they advise, the next 90 days are critical. Here is the recommended sequence:
Panama’s fintech regulation is still in motion: Draft Law No.314 has not yet been enacted, and secondary regulations will add further detail. However, the SBP’s AML framework is already enforceable, and banks are already tightening access. Operators who build compliance infrastructure now will be first in line for both licences and banking relationships when the final rules land. For guidance on licensing strategy, bank introductions and AML remediation, contact Global Law Experts or browse the lawyer directory to connect with fintech lawyers in Panama who specialise in this space.
Last reviewed: 7 May 2026
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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