Regulated United Europe OÜ
Registration number: 14153440
Anno: 16.11.2016
Phone: +372 56 966 260
Email: [email protected]
Address: Laeva 2, Tallinn, 10111, Estonia
Launch a compliant crypto business in El Salvador with RUE. We advise on BSP and DASP licensing, CNAD-facing documentation, AML setup, and banking readiness.
Schedule Free ConsultationEl Salvador remains one of the few jurisdictions where crypto licensing is built around dedicated digital asset legislation rather than fragmented legacy rules. RUE helps founders determine whether they need a BSP registration, a DASP authorization, or a deeper perimeter analysis before launch.
As your point of contact, I help coordinate the licensing process end-to-end, keep communication clear, and move your application forward without unnecessary delays.
RUE provides end-to-end support for crypto license projects in El Salvador: business-model scoping, company formation, compliance pack drafting, regulator-facing submissions, and post-license readiness.
We separate statutory requirements from market practice, structure AML/KYC/KYT controls around your real operating model, and help align licensing with banking, accounting, and cross-border expansion.
El Salvador built a specific legal regime around Bitcoin and digital assets, with **CNAD** as a named sector regulator rather than relying only on general financial law.
The jurisdiction distinguishes **Bitcoin Service Providers** from broader **Digital Asset Service Providers**, which is useful when structuring BTC-only versus multi-asset models.
El Salvador is often used for international crypto operations, but the license must still be mapped against target-country rules on solicitation, custody, payments, and securities.
The jurisdiction can be attractive where the activity falls within the statutory digital asset scope, but founders still need clean accounting segregation, AML controls, and banking strategy.
Obtaining a crypto license in El Salvador requires more than filing a company and submitting a short business description. In practice, the regulator expects a coherent operating model: legal entity, ownership transparency, AML governance, technical controls, and a documented explanation of how client assets, onboarding, transaction monitoring, and incident handling will work.
The exact package depends on whether your model falls under a BSP regime, a DASP regime, or a hybrid structure that touches both Bitcoin-specific and broader digital asset activities. The strongest applications show not only formal compliance, but also operational credibility: who manages risk, how client funds are segregated, what happens during a security incident, and how suspicious activity is escalated to the relevant authority.
You typically need an El Salvador company or another structure acceptable for local registration and licensing workflow, together with a registered address, constitutional documents, tax registration, and a clear ownership chain. Founders should expect disclosure of shareholders, directors, and ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs). If the ownership structure includes foreign holding companies, supporting corporate documents, legalization, apostilles, and Spanish translations often become timeline drivers.
In many projects, founders use a local operating company while keeping IP, treasury, or group governance at holding level. That can work, but only if intercompany functions, outsourcing, and decision-making are documented properly.
Market practice often uses an authorized capital benchmark of around USD 2,000 for the local company setup, but founders should not confuse company capital mechanics with full launch funding. The regulator and banks will care far more about whether the business has enough real runway to operate safely.
A serious application usually includes a funding memo, bank evidence, and a 12-month operating budget showing salaries, vendors, compliance tools, and security costs.
Founders, directors, and key control persons should be able to demonstrate professional credibility, clean background, and a logical connection to the proposed business. Expect requests for:
One practical point many founders underestimate: if the named director cannot explain the product, custody model, onboarding flow, or sanctions controls, the file looks weak even if the paperwork is formally complete.
Your AML/CFT framework must be tailored to the actual business model. A generic policy is usually the fastest route to regulator questions and banking friction. At minimum, the compliance stack should cover:
For transfer, exchange, custody, and remittance-like models, founders should also plan for Travel Rule implementation through internal workflows or interoperability tools such as TRISA/OpenVASP-type solutions.
The regulator does not review only legal text; it reviews whether the business can operate safely. For custody or wallet models, you should document:
ISO 27001 or SOC 2 are not statutory prerequisites, but they materially improve credibility with regulators, banks, institutional clients, and auditors.
The business plan should explain the product, customer journey, target markets, revenue logic, compliance controls, outsourcing, and risk management. A strong file usually includes:
One useful differentiator is a winding-down plan. It shows how client assets, records, and open positions would be handled if the business had to stop operations in an orderly way.
There is no universal one-line rule that every crypto company must maintain a large physical office in El Salvador, but a pure letterbox setup is usually a weak position. Higher-risk models such as exchange, custody, or remittance-like services should expect stronger scrutiny around local substance, responsible persons, and real management oversight.
In practice, founders often need:
The more your model touches fiat rails, custody, or retail onboarding, the more important local operational credibility becomes.
A license does not guarantee a bank account. Banking is usually the real bottleneck after approval. Founders should prepare a separate onboarding pack for banks or EMIs covering:
Software-only or analytics businesses typically face less friction than custodial exchanges, OTC desks, or remittance-heavy models with retail fiat flows.
Compare El Salvador with other jurisdictions by key conditions for obtaining and operating a MiCA/CASP license: regulator, review period, fees, capital, local substance, and passporting.
* This table focuses on MiCA/CASP authorization conditions. Use the settings icon to customize countries and parameters.
The tax position of a licensed crypto business in El Salvador should be analyzed by activity type, not by slogan. The most common market oversimplification is to say that El Salvador offers “0% tax” for crypto across the board. That is too broad. The more accurate approach is to distinguish between income that falls within the statutory digital asset framework and income that remains subject to ordinary tax rules.
For digital asset licensing, online sources often show different USD numbers because they convert the statutory fee formula into dollars using different wage benchmarks or outdated assumptions. The cleaner way to read the rule is as a formula:
That means the exact USD amount can change if the official benchmark changes. Founders should therefore verify the current wage reference and regulator practice at the time of filing rather than relying on recycled figures from old articles.
The Digital Assets Issuance Law (LEAD) is commonly cited for tax benefits linked to qualifying digital asset activity. However, tax treatment still depends on how the revenue is characterized, where it is sourced, and whether it clearly falls inside the protected statutory scope. A licensed company may still have taxable streams such as consulting income, unrelated fiat services, local payroll obligations, or non-qualifying service revenue.
The government fee is only one line item. In practice, founders should budget separately for company formation, notarization, apostilles, sworn translations, legal drafting, AML manuals, cybersecurity policies, local corporate maintenance, accounting, and banking onboarding. For many projects, these soft costs exceed the statutory fee several times over.
The one-time licensing fee is commonly expressed as 15 times the applicable monthly minimum wage benchmark. Because websites convert this formula into USD using different assumptions, published numbers often conflict. Always verify the current official benchmark before filing.
The annual renewal fee is commonly expressed as 10 times the applicable monthly minimum wage benchmark. This is a statutory-style fee and should be separated from annual legal, accounting, and compliance maintenance costs.
El Salvador’s standard corporate income tax reference is commonly stated at 30% for ordinary taxable profits. This may apply to revenue streams that do not benefit from digital-asset-specific exemptions or that fall outside the protected statutory scope. Proper income segmentation is essential.
*General reference rate; actual treatment depends on characterization of income and current tax rules.
Article 36 of LEAD is central to the tax discussion. It is commonly referenced for exemptions linked to qualifying digital asset issuance and related regulated activity. The key issue is not whether the company is “crypto”, but whether the specific income stream falls within the legal scope of the exemption.
Some digital-asset-related transactions may benefit from special treatment if they are covered by the statutory framework, while advisory, software, or unrelated local services may still follow ordinary tax logic. Founders should not assume blanket exemption for every invoice issued by a licensed entity.
If the company hires local staff or maintains local substance, payroll-related taxes and social contributions remain part of the cost base. This is one reason why tax planning should be integrated with substance planning, not treated as a separate afterthought.
Even where the statutory framework is favorable, the company still needs clean books, revenue classification, wallet-to-ledger reconciliation, and documentation separating exempt digital asset activity from taxable ancillary income. RUE often coordinates this with accounting support and crypto-specific reporting workflows.
A realistic launch budget usually includes:
Simple software or non-custodial projects can sit at the lower end; exchange, custody, or tokenization structures usually sit much higher.
A crypto license in El Salvador is not a one-time filing event. Licensed businesses must maintain real AML, governance, security, and reporting controls after approval.
A crypto license in El Salvador usually means one of two regulatory tracks: a BSP route for Bitcoin-focused services and a DASP route for broader digital asset services under the modern digital assets framework. In practice, the key question is not what you call the business, but what functions it performs: exchange, custody, transfer, issuance support, placement, or operation of a digital asset platform.
The legal architecture most founders need to understand is this:
In real projects, the end-to-end timeline is usually 3-6 months, not “20 business days from zero to license.” The often-cited ~20 business days refers only to a regulator review stage after a complete submission. It does not include company formation, translations, compliance drafting, clarifications, or banking.
RUE advises founders on the full path: scope analysis, local entity setup, AML/KYC/KYT framework, filing package, and post-license readiness. For businesses comparing jurisdictions, see also our broader crypto license 2026 overview and crypto regulations hub.
Yes, but the phrase “crypto-friendly” needs qualification in 2026. El Salvador remains strategically important because it still combines a pro-digital-assets policy stance with dedicated legislation and a visible regulator. What changed is that founders can no longer rely on the simplified 2021 narrative alone.
The correct way to read the jurisdiction after the 2025 reform cycle is to separate three layers:
That distinction matters. A founder may like El Salvador’s public positioning, but approval still depends on ordinary regulatory fundamentals: ownership transparency, credible governance, sanctions controls, and a defensible product perimeter. This is also why older statements such as “all merchants must accept Bitcoin” should not be repeated without reform context in 2026.
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Based on your answers, this jurisdiction matches your business requirements well. Here's a quick summary:
Recommended License
CASP License
Estimated Budget
€24,000 – €35,000
Estimated Timeframe
4–6 months
EU Passporting
Available
We first determine whether your model falls under BSP, DASP, both, or a grey-zone perimeter analysis. This stage maps services, token flows, custody, target markets, and banking dependencies. Typical duration: 1-2 weeks.
We incorporate the El Salvador entity, prepare constitutional documents, register the company, and coordinate tax and corporate formalities. Apostilles, translations, and foreign shareholder documents usually drive timing. Typical duration: 2-6 weeks.
We prepare the AML/CFT manual, risk assessment, KYC/KYT workflow, sanctions controls, governance documents, cybersecurity policy, client disclosures, and 3-year business plan. Typical duration: 2-6 weeks.
We submit the licensing package to the relevant authority and ensure the file is internally consistent. A complete first filing materially improves review speed and reduces clarification rounds. Typical duration: 1 week.
The regulator reviews the file and may issue questions or clarification requests. The often-cited review period of about 20 business days should be understood as a review-stage estimate after complete submission, not the total project timeline.
After approval, the company proceeds with final registry status, internal implementation, and operational go-live preparation. Any conditions attached to approval must be satisfied before full launch.
We support bank or EMI onboarding, accounting setup, customer onboarding controls, and post-license compliance calendar. Banking often takes 4-8 weeks or longer depending on risk profile and fiat exposure.