Crypto License in Bahamas 2026

Obtain a Bahamas digital asset license under the DARE Act, 2024. RUE supports exchanges, custodians, token issuers, and other digital asset businesses before the SCB.

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Regulator
SCB
Timeframe
4-12 months
Cost
from $24,900
Capital
risk-based
Depends on activity scope, governance, AML stack, and operational substance.

Why the Bahamas for a Crypto License

A crypto license in Bahamas usually means licensing or registration of a digital asset business under the Securities Commission of The Bahamas under the Digital Assets and Registered Exchanges Act, 2024. RUE helps founders map the right scope, prepare the application pack, and build the governance and AML framework the regulator expects in 2026.

Polina Merkulova

Polina Merkulova

Licensing Services Manager

[email protected]

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.

Regulated United Europe (RUE) provides end-to-end support for a Bahamas crypto license, including activity scoping under the DARE Act, company structuring, drafting of AML/CFT and cybersecurity policies, preparation of business plans and financial projections, and regulator-facing application management.

We also support post-license readiness: banking strategy, internal controls, outsourcing review, annual compliance planning, and coordination with accountants, auditors, and local service providers so the licensed entity is operationally credible, not just formally approved.

Contact me
🏛️

Modern Digital Asset Framework

The Bahamas operates under the **Digital Assets and Registered Exchanges Act, 2024**, with the **Securities Commission of The Bahamas (SCB)** as the primary regulator for the DASP regime.

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Internationally Recognized Financial Centre

The jurisdiction combines English-language legal infrastructure, common law tradition, and a mature cross-border financial services ecosystem relevant for exchanges, custody, and token projects.

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Post-FTX Stronger Oversight

The Bahamas is no longer perceived as an easy-entry crypto domicile. After the FTX collapse, regulator focus increased on governance, custody segregation, disclosures, market conduct, and risk controls.

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Useful for Serious Operators

The Bahamas can work well for founders who need a regulated base for exchange, brokerage, custody, or token-related activity and are prepared for real compliance, banking due diligence, and ongoing reporting.

Bahamas crypto license 2026

22,800 EUR
Package includes (8)
  • Preparation of necessary documents for registration of a new company in Bahamas 2026
  • Translation of a certificate of no criminal record through a sworn translator
  • Payment of state fees related to company registration
  • Payment of notary fees related to company registration
  • Preparation of compliance documents for MiCA application
  • Preparation of a business plan
  • Submission of the necessary documents to SCB
  • Recruitment of local MLRO/Compliance officer
Timeframe: From 4 months

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Comprehensive Requirements for Bahamas Crypto License

A Bahamas crypto license is not one universal permit. It is a regulatory status tied to the actual digital asset activity you will conduct, such as exchange operation, dealing, custody, token issuance, or other digital asset business within the scope of the Digital Assets and Registered Exchanges Act, 2024.

The Securities Commission of The Bahamas (SCB) reviews not only legal documents, but also whether the applicant can operate safely in practice. In 2026, that means the regulator will look closely at ownership transparency, governance, AML/CFT controls, custody architecture, cybersecurity, financial resilience, and the realism of the business model.

Below are the core requirements that usually determine whether a Bahamas digital asset license application is viable. Some are statutory, some are regulator expectations, and some are market-practice necessities if you want the license to be bankable and sustainable after approval.

Defined Regulated Activity Scope +

You must define exactly which digital asset activities you will perform before filing. The SCB expects the application scope to match the real operating model, not a broad wish list.

  • Typical regulated buckets include exchange operation, broker/dealer activity, custody or wallet services, token offerings, and some staking or stablecoin-related structures depending on design.
  • NFT and DeFi analysis is functional, not label-based. If a token or protocol creates economic rights, custody exposure, intermediation, or platform control, the activity may still fall within scope.
  • A common filing mistake is to incorporate first and only later decide the business model. In practice, licensing strategy should come before entity setup and policy drafting.
Bahamas Company, Registered Office, and Ownership Transparency +

The applicant will normally need a Bahamian legal entity with a registered office and properly disclosed ownership structure. The Bahamas does not offer anonymous regulated ownership in any practical sense.

  • Beneficial owners, controllers, and funding sources must be disclosed to the relevant authorities and service providers.
  • The regulator will assess source of funds and, where relevant, source of wealth, especially where funding comes from crypto-native wealth, layered holding structures, trusts, or high-risk jurisdictions.
  • A closed beneficial ownership registry does not mean no disclosure to authorities. Founders using nominee-heavy or opaque structures usually face enhanced scrutiny.
  • For many applicants, practical substance also matters: local administration, decision-making evidence, service provider arrangements, and credible governance from within or connected to the Bahamas.
Fit-and-Proper Directors, CEO, Compliance Officer, and MLRO +

The SCB expects key persons to be fit and proper. That assessment goes beyond clean criminal records and covers competence, integrity, time commitment, and the ability to control the business.

  • Core roles often include directors, senior management, a Compliance Officer, and an MLRO or equivalent AML reporting function.
  • Applicants should be ready to provide detailed CVs, references, identification documents, police clearance where required, and personal questionnaires.
  • Role stacking is possible only if it is defensible. A founder acting simultaneously as CEO, MLRO, and risk owner is a classic red flag for any serious exchange or custody model.
  • Outsourcing compliance can work in limited cases, but only if oversight, reporting lines, and accountability remain clear. Outsourcing does not outsource regulatory responsibility.
Capital, Liquidity Buffer, and Insurance Planning +

There is no single universal minimum capital number that safely answers every Bahamas crypto license case. Capital expectations are risk-based and linked to the activity, scale, custody exposure, and projected operating costs.

  • Market commentary often cites USD 50,000 as a starting reference for some lighter models, but this should never be treated as a universal statutory minimum for all digital asset businesses.
  • You must distinguish between authorized share capital, paid-up capital, regulatory capital, and a practical operating liquidity buffer.
  • For planning purposes, many serious applicants budget at least 6 months of operating expenses as a solvency runway, especially where onboarding, banking, and revenue ramp-up will take time.
  • Custody and exchange models may also need insurance analysis, including professional indemnity, cyber, and sometimes crime/fidelity coverage depending on the risk profile.
AML/CFT/CPF Framework and Travel Rule Readiness +

Your AML framework must align with the Bahamian AML stack, including the Financial Transactions Reporting Act, 2018, the Proceeds of Crime Act, 2018, the Anti-Terrorism Act, 2018, and related rules and supervisory expectations.

  • You need a business-wide ML/TF/PF risk assessment, customer risk scoring, onboarding controls, sanctions screening, ongoing monitoring, escalation procedures, and suspicious transaction reporting logic.
  • For crypto-native flows, the regulator and banking partners will expect more than manual review. In practice, applicants should be ready to deploy blockchain analytics, wallet screening, and adverse media checks.
  • FATF Recommendation 15 and Travel Rule readiness matter for cross-border VASP activity even where local implementation details evolve over time.
  • Records should generally be retained for at least 5 years where required by applicable AML rules.
Cybersecurity, Wallet Governance, and Custody Controls +

If your business touches client assets, the SCB will expect a real control environment, not generic statements about security.

  • Core controls usually include segregation of client assets, hot/cold wallet policies, access matrices, dual control, privileged access logging, and reconciliation procedures.
  • Institutional-grade custody stacks often rely on MPC, HSMs, or tightly governed multi-signature arrangements, depending on architecture.
  • You should maintain incident response, business continuity, disaster recovery, vulnerability management, and periodic penetration testing.
  • A strong application explains key generation, key backup, wallet whitelisting, withdrawal approval logic, and how insider abuse risk is controlled. That level of detail is often what separates credible custody applicants from rejected ones.
Business Plan, Financial Projections, and Operational Model +

The application must show that the business is commercially coherent and operationally controllable.

  • The business plan should explain services, target markets, onboarding channels, revenue model, outsourcing, banking rails, custody flow, complaints handling, and wind-down planning.
  • Financial projections should normally cover at least 3 years and show assumptions clearly. Unrealistic hockey-stick revenue is one of the fastest ways to lose regulator confidence.
  • Applicants should identify concentration risks: dependence on one market maker, one liquidity venue, one banking partner, or one technology vendor.
  • Where fiat on-ramp/off-ramp is essential, letters of intent from banking, EMI, or payment partners materially strengthen the file.
Client Asset Protection, Disclosures, and Market Conduct Controls +

Investor protection is central to the post-FTX Bahamas framework. If you hold assets, run a platform, or issue tokens, disclosure and conduct controls matter as much as corporate paperwork.

  • Custodians should demonstrate segregation, entitlement records, reconciliation, and clear insolvency treatment in customer terms.
  • Trading venues should address order handling, conflicts of interest, market surveillance, wash trading, spoofing, insider dealing, and suspicious activity escalation.
  • Token issuers may need an offering memorandum or equivalent disclosure package depending on structure and distribution model.
  • Stablecoin projects face heavier scrutiny around reserve assets, redemption mechanics, governance, and attestations of backing.

Jurisdiction Comparison

Compare Bahamas with other jurisdictions by key conditions for obtaining and operating a MiCA/CASP license: regulator, review period, fees, capital, local substance, and passporting.

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Taxation of Crypto Companies in the Bahamas

The Bahamas is often described as tax-neutral, but that phrase should be used carefully. For most international structures, the jurisdiction is known for the absence of several direct taxes, yet a licensed digital asset business still faces real fiscal and operating costs through VAT exposure on local services, payroll-related costs, customs and import charges where relevant, stamp duty in certain transactions, annual filings, audit, insurance, and professional services.

Core tax position for many Bahamas crypto structures

The Bahamas generally does not impose corporate income tax, capital gains tax, or withholding tax on dividends in the way many onshore jurisdictions do. That is one reason the jurisdiction remains attractive for international holding and operating structures.

However, founders should not market the structure as “tax free” without qualification. Tax outcomes depend on where management is exercised, where staff are located, whether the group has taxable presence elsewhere, how token flows are characterized, and whether foreign tax rules, CFC rules, or substance rules apply in the shareholder’s home jurisdiction.

Indirect taxes and practical cost layer

The Bahamas applies VAT at 12% on many local goods and services. Depending on your operating footprint, you may also face local fees, payroll costs, customs duties, and transaction-specific stamp duty. In addition, a licensed digital asset company must budget for annual audit, accounting, legal support, compliance staff, screening tools, cyber controls, and insurance.

For tax planning around a Bahamas crypto license, RUE typically combines licensing analysis with cross-border structuring, banking strategy, and accounting support. Related resources include Bahamas Crypto Tax, Crypto Business Bank Account, and international accounting services.

Corporate Income Tax

Generally not imposed at company level
0%

The Bahamas is generally known for the absence of corporate income tax. For many international crypto structures, this means no local corporate tax on business profits. This does not eliminate tax exposure in other jurisdictions where shareholders, management, staff, or permanent establishment risks exist.

Capital Gains Tax

No separate local capital gains tax regime
0%

The Bahamas generally does not impose capital gains tax. This can be relevant for disposals of shares or appreciation in business value, but cross-border founders must still review home-country taxation, exit tax rules, and anti-avoidance provisions.

Dividend Withholding Tax

No standard local withholding on dividends
0%

Dividend distributions are generally not subject to local withholding tax in the Bahamas. The practical tax result for shareholders still depends on their own residence, treaty position, and controlled foreign company rules in the relevant home jurisdiction.

Value Added Tax (VAT)

Applies to many local goods and services
12%

The Bahamas applies VAT at 12%. A digital asset company may incur VAT on local professional services, office costs, and other domestic supplies depending on its operating model. VAT treatment should be reviewed case by case with local tax advisers and accountants.

Stamp Duty

Transaction-specific and context dependent
varies

Stamp duty can apply in certain transactions, especially where local property, instruments, or specific legal acts are involved. It is not a universal operating tax for every crypto company, so it should be assessed by transaction type rather than assumed as a flat annual cost.

SCB Application and Regulatory Fees

Official licensing and annual supervisory cost layer
varies

Official SCB fees depend on the activity type and current fee schedule. Public market references often cite figures such as USD 6,250 application fee and USD 18,750 registration fee for exchanges, with lower categories for some other digital asset businesses, but applicants should verify the current official schedule before relying on any number. Annual renewal fees are separate and should not be confused with filing fees.

Audit and Accounting

Mandatory recurring compliance cost
$8k-$40k+

Annual audit and accounting costs depend on transaction volume, custody complexity, group structure, and reporting quality. A light advisory model may spend at the lower end; an exchange or custody-heavy business will usually spend materially more. RUE can coordinate this with accounting services and annual compliance planning.

Insurance and Compliance Tooling

Operational cost often underestimated by founders
$15k-$120k+

Cyber insurance, professional indemnity, crime cover, sanctions screening, KYC vendors, blockchain analytics, and transaction monitoring tools can materially increase Year-1 and annual budgets. This cost layer is often larger than the official filing fee and should be built into the licensing model from day one.

Compliance & Ongoing Obligations

A Bahamas crypto license is the start of supervision, not the end of the project. Licensed firms must maintain governance, AML controls, reporting discipline, and regulator-approved change management on an ongoing basis.

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Reporting and Filings

  • Annual audited financial statements within applicable deadlines
  • Annual renewal fee payment under the SCB schedule
  • Regulatory notifications for material events and breaches
  • Suspicious transaction reporting where triggered
  • Maintenance of books, records, and audit trail data
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AML/CFT/CPF Controls

  • Customer due diligence and enhanced due diligence for high-risk clients
  • Sanctions screening and adverse media review
  • Ongoing transaction monitoring including blockchain analytics where relevant
  • Travel Rule readiness for cross-border VASP interactions
  • Periodic AML training and independent control testing
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Operational and Custody Standards

  • Segregation of client assets from house assets
  • Wallet governance, privileged access control, and reconciliation
  • Cybersecurity program, incident response, and penetration testing
  • Business continuity and disaster recovery arrangements
  • Vendor and outsourcing oversight for critical functions
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Governance and Change Management

  • Notification or approval for changes in ownership, directors, or key persons
  • Regulator engagement before launching new products or services
  • Board oversight and documented management decision-making
  • Periodic review of risk assessment, AML manual, and customer terms
  • Maintenance of fit-and-proper standards across management
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RUE handles compliance for you. Our team provides ongoing compliance support, including AML officer services, regulatory reporting, and policy updates. We ensure your license stays in good standing year after year. Contact us for compliance support →

Bahamas crypto license in 2026: what it really means

Bahamas crypto license in 2026: what it really means

A crypto license in Bahamas usually means authorization or registration to conduct a digital asset business under the Digital Assets and Registered Exchanges Act, 2024, supervised by the Securities Commission of The Bahamas. There is no single one-size-fits-all permit that covers every crypto model equally.

The practical question is not “Do I need a crypto license?” but which exact activity is regulated, at what risk level, and with what governance burden. An exchange, a custody provider, a token issuer, and a staking platform may all sit under the same legislative umbrella, but the compliance architecture and regulator scrutiny will differ materially.

At a glance:

  • Primary regulator: Securities Commission of The Bahamas (SCB)
  • Main law: Digital Assets and Registered Exchanges Act, 2024
  • Supporting AML framework: FTRA 2018, Proceeds of Crime Act 2018, Anti-Terrorism Act 2018
  • Typical timeline: 4-12 months for cleaner cases; longer for complex structures
  • Reality in 2026: post-FTX Bahamas is a more scrutinized, more credibility-driven licensing environment

For founders comparing options, see also Crypto license 2026, BVI Crypto license 2026, Cayman Islands Crypto License 2026, and Crypto Regulations 2026.

📝 Check Your Eligibility

Answer a few quick questions to find out if this jurisdiction suits your crypto business

Step 1 of 5

What type of crypto services will you provide?

Exchange (fiat ↔ crypto)
Custody & Wallet Services
Transfer & Payment Services
Advisory / Portfolio Management
Multiple / All of the Above
Step 2 of 5

What is your target market?

European Union only
EU + Global markets
Global (non-EU priority)
Step 3 of 5

Do you already have a registered company in the EU?

Yes, in this jurisdiction
Yes, in another EU country
No, I need to register one
Step 4 of 5

What is your available budget range?

Under €20,000
€20,000 – €50,000
€50,000 – €100,000
Over €100,000
Step 5 of 5

When do you plan to launch?

As soon as possible (1–3 months)
Within 6 months
Within a year
Just exploring options

This Jurisdiction Is a Great Fit!

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

📞 Get Personalized Assessment

Step-by-Step Licensing Process

Step 1

Scope & Strategy

Define the exact digital asset activity, licensing perimeter, ownership structure, and regulator strategy before incorporation. This is where exchange, custody, staking, token, and stablecoin models are separated. Typical duration: 1-3 weeks.

Step 2

Company Setup

Incorporate the Bahamian entity, arrange registered office and corporate records, and align ownership disclosure, source-of-funds file, and governance structure with the planned regulated activity. Typical duration: 1-3 weeks.

Step 3

Application Pack

Prepare the business plan, AML/CFT framework, risk assessment, compliance manual, cybersecurity and custody policies, financial projections, outsourcing matrix, and personal documents for key persons. Typical duration: 4-8 weeks.

Step 4

Submission to SCB

Submit the application with the appropriate forms, supporting documents, and official fees. The file should be internally consistent across ownership, financials, technology, and compliance sections to avoid early deficiency notices.

Step 5

SCB Review & Q&A

The SCB conducts due diligence, reviews the business model, and issues questions or remediation requests. Expect 1-3 rounds of queries in many cases, and more for complex exchange, custody, or token structures. Typical duration: 2-6 months.

Step 6

Approval & Conditions

Receive approval or in-principle approval subject to final conditions, such as staffing, insurance, banking, policy updates, or operational controls. Timing depends on how quickly the applicant closes the outstanding items.

Step 7

Launch Readiness

Complete banking and payment onboarding, implement monitoring and reporting workflows, finalize client terms, establish the compliance calendar, and prepare for audit and regulator notifications before commercial launch.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you apply for a Bahamas crypto license remotely? +

Yes, in many cases you can prepare and submit the application remotely with local corporate support and proper filings, but remote preparation does not remove substance, governance, or regulator comfort requirements.

You will still need a Bahamian entity, registered office, disclosed ownership, and a credible operating model. For many applicants, local service providers, local administration, or local governance touchpoints remain important even if founders are non-resident.

Do you need a physical office in the Bahamas? +

You will generally need at least a registered office, and some level of local operational presence may be expected depending on the model.

There is no safe universal rule that every applicant must maintain the same office footprint. In practice, the SCB will assess whether the firm has enough substance, governance access, and local infrastructure for its risk profile. A custody or exchange business usually faces higher expectations than a narrower model.

What is the minimum capital for a Bahamas crypto license? +

There is no single universal minimum capital figure that fits every Bahamas crypto business.

Market sources often cite USD 50,000 as a starting reference for some lighter models, but that should not be treated as a blanket statutory minimum. Actual capital expectations depend on the activity type, custody exposure, operating costs, insurance profile, and the SCB’s risk assessment. Paid-up capital, regulatory capital, and liquidity buffer should be analyzed separately.

How long does it take to get a crypto license in the Bahamas? +

A realistic timeline is usually around 4-12 months for a relatively clean and well-prepared application.

Complex models such as exchanges, custody-heavy businesses, stablecoin structures, or applications requiring major remediation can take 6-18 months. The main drivers of delay are unclear ownership, weak AML documentation, poor financial projections, and insufficient technical detail on custody and cybersecurity controls.

Are NFTs and DeFi regulated in the Bahamas? +

Sometimes yes, sometimes no; the answer depends on function, rights, and actual control.

An NFT used only as a collectible may sit outside the core licensing perimeter more easily than an NFT with fractional ownership, investment rights, or managed resale economics. A DeFi product may still raise licensing issues if a company controls governance, treasury, onboarding, fees, or custody-linked infrastructure. Labels do not decide scope; functionality does.

What are the main ongoing obligations after approval? +

Ongoing obligations usually include annual renewal, audit, record-keeping, AML monitoring, and regulator notifications for material changes.

Licensed firms should expect annual audited financial statements, retention of records for at least 5 years where applicable, suspicious transaction reporting when triggered, maintenance of AML/CFT controls, and prior engagement with the SCB before major changes in ownership, management, or product scope.

Can a Bahamas licensed company serve clients outside the Bahamas? +

Yes, many Bahamas structures are designed for international business, but cross-border legality must be checked market by market.

A Bahamas license does not automatically override foreign licensing rules. If you target clients in the EU, UK, US, or other regulated markets, you may still need additional authorization, registration, or restrictions on marketing and onboarding. Cross-border distribution should be reviewed separately from the Bahamas license itself.

Can you buy a ready-made Bahamas crypto licensed company? +

Sometimes, but availability is limited and any change of control in a regulated entity requires careful regulatory analysis.

Buying a shelf or ready-made licensed company can shorten time to market, but it does not eliminate fit-and-proper review, source-of-funds scrutiny, or the need to align the existing license scope with your real business model. Buyers should conduct legal, regulatory, financial, AML, and technology due diligence before relying on this route.

What is the biggest mistake founders make when applying in the Bahamas? +

The biggest mistake is treating the process as a paperwork exercise instead of an operational readiness test.

Applications fail or stall when founders submit generic AML manuals, vague business plans, weak source-of-funds evidence, and no real custody or cybersecurity design. In 2026, the Bahamas licensing process rewards applicants that can prove governance, controls, and realistic execution—not just legal formality.