Author
No results available
Every few months, a founder lands in our inbox with a variation of the same question: “We want a crypto license in El Salvador, how fast can we get set up?”
Our answer is always the same: slower down, let’s look at the full picture first. Because El Salvador is genuinely one of the most attractive licensing jurisdictions in the Americas right now, but the gap between what most online guides describe and what the application process actually involves is wide enough to derail a well-funded project.
We’ve guided businesses through the Salvadoran licensing framework since the CNAD’s regulatory architecture started solidifying in 2023. This article is the distillation of that experience: what the DASP license actually covers, how the 2025 regulatory shifts affect your application today, where the real friction points live, and how to structure your approach so you don’t waste six months submitting a file that isn’t ready.
Let’s address the elephant in the room. Some founders saw the 2025 Bitcoin Law amendments, where El Salvador, under pressure from a $1.4 billion IMF loan deal, made Bitcoin acceptance voluntary rather than mandatory, and concluded the country was retreating from crypto.
El Salvador’s Congress approved legislation amending the country’s Bitcoin law to align with requirements under its loan agreement with the IMF, making acceptance voluntary. That reading misses what actually happened.
Think of it this way: the government revised the political Bitcoin experiment while leaving the commercial crypto infrastructure completely intact. The Digital Asset Issuance Law (LEAD) of 2023, which is the foundation for the DASP licensing framework, was not touched.
While the 2024–2025 IMF agreement led to changes like removing mandatory Bitcoin acceptance for merchants and ending tax payments in BTC, the core exemption of capital gains tax on Bitcoin transactions remained in place.
For crypto businesses seeking a regulated base in Latin America, that distinction is everything. The zero-tax regime, the CNAD licensing process, and the legal clarity provided by the LEAD framework all survive the IMF-driven political recalibration.
El Salvador has evolved from a Bitcoin pioneer into a mature, regulated hub for the global digital asset economy, with the Digital Asset Issuance Law firmly in place, providing a transparent environment for exchanges, custodians, and token issuers.
The country is no longer trying to prove a political point with Bitcoin. It is now focused on building a functional crypto regulatory ecosystem, and for operators, that is arguably more useful.
Before you file a single document with the CNAD, you need to be clear on which license you actually need. Getting this wrong early in the process is one of the most common mistakes we see, and it costs applicants months.
There are two types of crypto licenses in El Salvador: the Bitcoin License (BSP), which is for Bitcoin-only companies, and the DASP (Digital Asset Service Provider) License, which regulates digital asset service providers more broadly.
The DASP license is issued and regulated by the CNAD, the Comisión Nacional de Activos Digitales. The main crypto license allowing companies to operate as a crypto business in El Salvador is called the PSAD (Proveedor de Servicios de Activos Digitales) or DASP License in English. It is issued and regulated by the National Commission on Digital Assets.
The practical split is straightforward: if your business exclusively handles Bitcoin, BTC wallets, BTC payment processing, BTC remittance, then the BSP route, which runs through the Central Reserve Bank (BCR), may be sufficient. The moment you touch any other digital asset, ETH, USDC, any altcoin, NFTs, tokenized real-world assets, you need a DASP license. If you run a multi-asset exchange (BTC + ETH), you typically need both registrations.
Here is the part most guides skip: the sequencing matters. The bank account must be opened before CNAD registration. International crypto-friendly EMIs provide the practical banking solution post-registration.
We have seen founders attempt to run these steps in the wrong order and stall the entire process as a result. Banking and entity formation are not post-licensing tasks. They are pre-licensing requirements that need to be structured correctly from day one.

The DASP license is not a single narrow permission. It is an umbrella authorisation covering a meaningful range of digital asset services. Permitted activities under the DASP license include:
1. Exchange operations (trading digital assets for fiat or other digital assets)
2. Derivatives and trading (operating platforms for derivative digital assets, executing orders, and underwriting issuances)
3. Custody (safeguarding, managing, and transferring assets on behalf of clients), and
4. Wallet services (placing digital assets on digital platforms or wallets)
Beyond these core functions, licensed DASPs may also facilitate transfers and administration, receive and transmit orders, execute derivative orders, arrange placements, and promote and structure digital-asset investment products, among others.
For founders building multi-service crypto platforms, say, a platform that combines spot trading, custody, and token issuance under one roof, this breadth is genuinely useful. You are not stacking four separate regulatory applications. One DASP registration, properly structured, covers the full stack.
We need to be direct about this because there is significant misinformation circulating, particularly about what the IMF agreement changed and what it left alone.
CNAD-licensed companies are exempt from 0% corporate tax on digital asset transactions. Digital Asset Services Providers (DASPs) are also fully exempt from capital gains tax on the purchase, sale, or transfer of digital assets, transfer tax and other fees on the nominal value of crypto assets, and VAT on services related to the issuance, certification, or transfer of digital assets.
What changed in early 2025? The government removed Bitcoin as an accepted method for paying taxes, phased out the state-run Chivo wallet, and made Bitcoin acceptance voluntary for merchants. What did not change? The entire tax exemption architecture for licensed DASPs under Article 36 of the LEAD law.
There is one tax line that sometimes catches operators by surprise: withholding tax on payment of dividends sits at 5%, and the rate may increase to 25% if the recipient is located in a tax haven or a jurisdiction with a preferential tax regime. If your shareholder structure routes dividends to an entity in Belize or the Cayman Islands, this is a number you need to model before structuring your cap table, not after.
The headline takeaway: El Salvador’s tax regime for licensed crypto operators remains one of the most competitive in the region. The IMF-driven amendments were about Bitcoin’s role in domestic commerce, not about dismantling the commercial incentive framework.
A fair warning: much of what you will read about DASP requirements online is outdated. Regulations in El Salvador have moved quickly, and articles written in 2023 or early 2024 describe a materially different application environment. We update our approach continuously. Here is the current picture.
You need a locally registered legal entity. A flexible shareholder structure is permitted, with a minimum of two shareholders, which can be either individuals or legal entities, including both residents and non-residents (with a tax identification number in El Salvador).
One point worth noting: some sources still circulate the claim that two shareholders are mandatory. There are no requirements to have at least two shareholders for obtaining a cryptocurrency license in El Salvador.
This is widespread misinformation due to a previous version of the regulation. Work with advisors who are tracking current regulatory text, not archived versions.
Applicants must demonstrate a minimum share capital of $2,000 USD, with at least $100 USD paid-up capital. This is genuinely low by any international comparison, Estonia, for reference, requires significantly higher thresholds for comparable VASP authorizations.
The low capital requirement is not a signal of weak regulation; it reflects El Salvador’s deliberate policy to reduce barriers for startups and scale-ups.
This is where the real work sits. Core requirements include a locally registered company, business plan, implemented AML/CTF control measures including a compliance programme and two local compliance officers, reporting obligations, and robust operational policies.
The compliance framework must be operational at the time of application, not a theoretical document. CNAD reviewers examine whether your transaction monitoring architecture, customer due diligence procedures, and suspicious activity reporting mechanisms are genuinely functional. Think of it like an audit, not a paperwork exercise.
Applicants must demonstrate that their platform or system is secure, resilient, and capable of protecting client data and digital assets. In practice, this means your cybersecurity documentation, incident response plan, and operational resilience framework need to accompany the application.
Licensing is not a one-time event. Post-licensing obligations include: submitting monthly transaction reports including trading volumes, user numbers, and incident disclosures; conducting annual compliance audits documenting AML/CFT procedures; reporting material incidents including cybersecurity breaches or fraud within 24 hours; and maintaining customer fund segregation with quarterly reconciliation.
Beyond the Bitcoin Law amendments, two other developments are shaping the regulatory environment for DASP applicants in 2026.
First, the CNAD has been significantly strengthening its supervisory posture. CNAD has active powers to suspend or revoke licenses for AML breaches or unapproved service changes. The early years of CNAD’s operation were characterized by a lighter touch as the regulator built capacity. That period is over.
Applications are reviewed with more scrutiny, and post-licensing monitoring has intensified. The operators who sailed through applications in 2023 with thinner compliance documentation would find the same file returned today.
Second, El Salvador passed a dedicated Investment Banking Law in August 2025, creating a separate regulated pathway for institutional-grade digital asset banking. The 2025 Investment Banking Law separates investment banks from commercial banks, granting the former exclusive rights to engage in digital asset activities and positioning El Salvador as a strategic hub for crypto capital flows. For institutional operators, this introduces a distinct regulatory track worth evaluating alongside the standard DASP pathway.
Third, the geopolitical dimension matters for cross-border planning. The DASP license is valid for operations in and from El Salvador only. Separate authorization is required for EU, UK, or other regulated markets. There is no passporting.
If your business requires regulatory recognition in the EU under MiCA, or in the UK under FCA rules, El Salvador is a complement to your licensing strategy, not a substitute.
Here is our realistic breakdown of the licensing journey, based on files we have managed through completion.
Weeks 1–4: Pre-application structuring. Entity registration, shareholder documentation, local representative appointment, and, critically, banking arrangements. Do not underestimate this phase. Getting a corporate bank account for a DASP-licensed business in El Salvador requires relationship management. Local Salvadoran banks remain cautious. Most successful applicants use international crypto-friendly EMIs with established relationships in the market.
Weeks 5–10: Compliance framework build-out. AML/KYC policy documentation, transaction monitoring system implementation, appointment and onboarding of compliance officers (at least one must be resident in El Salvador), and cybersecurity documentation. This is the phase where underprepared applications stall. If you arrive at the CNAD submission stage without a functional compliance programme, you are not ready.
Weeks 11–16: Application submission and CNAD review. The DASP license carries a CNAD government fee of USD $5,475 and a 3-6 month processing timeline. CNAD will often issue information requests during review. Response time and quality at this stage directly affects your overall timeline.
Post-licensing: Annual fee of USD $3,650, quarterly reporting obligations, and ongoing CNAD supervision.
El Salvador is not right for every business model. Here is an honest comparison framework we use with clients.
El Salvador wins on: speed of application, low capital requirement, zero corporate tax on digital asset activities, the dollarized economy (USD operations with no currency risk), and a dedicated regulator with a clear mandate.
El Salvador has limitations around: the absence of passporting to major markets, a domestic market of only 6.5 million people (you are using this as a base for international operations, not a domestic play), and banking that requires careful pre-structuring.
Against Panama: El Salvador offers a more structured DASP-specific regulatory framework with clearer CNAD oversight. Panama has broader commercial infrastructure but less VASP-specific regulatory clarity.
Against Seychelles or BVI: El Salvador wins on regulatory legitimacy, a growing CNAD public registry that improves credibility with banking partners, and a dedicated regulator. Offshore jurisdictions with thin regulatory substance are increasingly challenged by banking partners and institutional counterparties.
Against EU jurisdictions (Lithuania, Estonia): EU jurisdictions offer MiCA passporting and access to the European financial ecosystem. El Salvador cannot replicate that. If your primary markets are European, a MiCA-compliant jurisdiction must be part of your strategy. El Salvador can sit alongside it as a cost-efficient base for non-EU operations.
For exchange operators, custodians, wallet providers, OTC desks, and token issuers targeting Latin American and global markets outside the EU, the El Salvador DASP license represents genuine value.
The regulatory framework is solid, the tax incentives are real, the CNAD is a functioning authority with growing credibility, and the application process is manageable for a well-prepared team.
The preparation is where most applications succeed or fail. An incomplete compliance framework, a rushed entity structure, or banking arranged in the wrong sequence will cost you more time than doing it right from the start.
Conclusion
El Salvador’s crypto licensing framework in 2026 is more mature, more credible, and more demanding than it was when the DASP regime first launched.
The IMF-driven amendments to the Bitcoin Law removed the political theatre without dismantling the commercial architecture. For crypto operators who want a legitimate, tax-efficient, cost-accessible base for digital asset services in the Americas, the DASP license remains one of the most compelling options in the region.
The founders who succeed here are the ones who treat the application as a compliance project, not a paperwork exercise. The CNAD is watching. The framework is real. The question is whether your operation is ready to demonstrate that it is too.
If you are evaluating a crypto license in El Salvador, or comparing Salvadoran DASP licensing against other Latin American or offshore jurisdictions, LegalBison’s licensing team works with founders at every stage of this process, from initial business model assessment through entity formation, compliance programme build-out, and CNAD submission management.
posted 3 minutes ago
posted 28 minutes ago
posted 52 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message