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
Obtain an SVG VASP registration for exchange, wallet, custody, or token-related business in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines with regulator-ready legal and compliance support from RUE.
Request Licensing Feasibility ReviewSaint Vincent and the Grenadines offers a defined virtual asset business framework with comparatively moderate entry costs, but it is not a universal answer for every crypto model. RUE helps founders assess whether SVG is the right jurisdiction, structure the applicant correctly, and prepare a file that can survive real regulatory scrutiny in 2026.
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 SVG VASP projects: applicant eligibility review, company formation, regulator-facing document drafting, AML/CFT framework design, officer structuring, and filing support.
We also help founders align the SVG application with banking, PSP onboarding, tax structuring, and cross-border operational reality, so the registration file works beyond the regulator and not only on paper.
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines regulates virtual asset business through a dedicated framework overseen by the SVGFSA, with AML/CFT supervision linked to the SVGFIU.
Government fees are generally lower than in many onshore regimes, but founders must budget separately for paid-up capital, statutory deposit, compliance drafting, audit, and banking onboarding.
SVG can fit exchange, brokerage, wallet, OTC, and custody-led structures. It is less suitable where founders need EU passporting, Tier-1 institutional optics, or immediate banking certainty.
A full local operating office is not always the core issue; the real test is whether governance, AML controls, responsible officers, and reporting lines are credible and workable.
An SVG crypto license is used in market language, but in legal practice the regime is closer to a VASP registration/authorization under the applicable virtual asset business framework. That distinction matters because the regulator reviews not only whether your company exists, but whether your proposed activities fall inside the regulated perimeter and whether your controls match the risk profile.
As of 2026, the core requirements usually include the correct applicant entity, minimum capital structure, statutory deposit, approved governance, AML/CFT controls, local contact functionality, and annual audit readiness. Founders should also separate three concepts that online guides often mix up: registered capital, paid-up capital, and security deposit. They are not interchangeable.
Below are the main requirements that typically determine whether an SVG VASP application moves efficiently or stalls in regulator questions.
The applicant must use a company form that the SVG framework and regulator practice accept for virtual asset business. Many online guides confuse IBC, BC, and LLC; in practice, founders should verify current applicant eligibility before incorporation rather than rely on generic offshore company marketing.
RUE typically starts with an entity-eligibility memo before formation, because fixing the wrong company type after filing costs more time than incorporating correctly from day one.
The framework commonly cited in practice distinguishes between registered capital of XCD 300,000 and minimum paid-up capital of XCD 50,000. Registered capital is the company’s authorized capital base; paid-up capital is the amount actually injected and evidenced.
Founders often underestimate this point: paid-up capital is not the same as the statutory deposit and does not eliminate the deposit requirement.
The statutory deposit is a separate financial safeguard. A commonly referenced formula in SVG practice is the greater of XCD 100,000 or 25% of financial obligations to clients. This means the deposit can scale upward as your client liabilities grow.
This is one of the most commercially important planning points in SVG because it affects real liquidity, not just legal paperwork.
An SVG VASP file must show functional governance, not nominee-only optics. In practice, the regulator expects clear responsibility lines for AML/CFT oversight, reporting, and local contactability.
One person may sometimes cover more than one compliance function only if the business is small, conflicts are manageable, and the regulator is satisfied that the person has real capacity. Treat role-combining as a case-by-case issue, not an automatic shortcut.
The SVGFSA and SVGFIU expect a business-specific AML/CFT framework. A generic template is one of the fastest ways to trigger regulator queries. Your file should show how you identify customers, monitor blockchain activity, escalate alerts, and exchange required transfer data.
In 2026, a VASP application without a credible Travel Rule implementation concept looks operationally incomplete even if the legal memo is strong.
SVG filings increasingly require founders to explain how the platform actually works. The regulator may not prescribe a single technical stack, but weak custody architecture is a major red flag.
A useful practical rule: if your CTO cannot explain asset movement, withdrawal approval logic, and emergency freeze procedures in a short regulator interview, the file is not ready.
The regulator expects a coherent business plan backed by realistic numbers. Over-optimistic projections, vague revenue assumptions, or unclear startup funding often delay approval more than legal drafting defects.
RUE usually stress-tests the financial model against compliance reality: screening tools, audit, local representation, and PSP friction must appear in the numbers, otherwise the plan looks artificial.
Compare SVG Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 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.
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines is often marketed as a tax-efficient jurisdiction for offshore structures, but founders should not reduce the analysis to a simplistic “0% tax” slogan. The correct question is whether the SVG company will actually remain tax-efficient once you factor in management location, founder residence, source-of-income rules, controlled foreign company (CFC) exposure, permanent establishment risk, and where client-facing operations are carried out.
For many international structures, SVG can offer a comparatively light local tax environment. However, local tax neutrality does not override foreign tax law. If the founders manage the business from the EU, UK, or another high-tax country, the effective tax outcome may be driven by that country rather than by the SVG incorporation alone.
Founders should separate taxes from regulatory and operational costs. In SVG, the commercial burden is often driven more by capital, deposit, audit, compliance outsourcing, and banking than by headline tax. A realistic annual budget should include renewal fees, audit, accounting, registered office or representative services, AML tooling, blockchain analytics, and legal maintenance.
SVG is widely used for internationally oriented structures because the local tax burden can be comparatively light. However, the actual result depends on whether income is treated as locally sourced, where management and control are exercised, and whether foreign anti-avoidance rules apply to the owners.
Founders should not rely on generic online claims without checking the exact asset type, transaction pattern, and foreign tax nexus. In cross-border crypto structures, gains may still be taxed in the founder’s country of residence or where the business is effectively managed.
Dividend, interest, royalty, and service-flow treatment should be reviewed together with the ownership chain. Even if SVG itself is efficient, intermediary jurisdictions and shareholder residence can change the outcome materially.
A commonly cited application fee for SVG VASP filing is XCD 4,000. Founders should verify the current fee schedule at filing date because administrative schedules can change.
A commonly referenced registration fee is XCD 12,000. This is separate from incorporation costs, legal drafting, compliance package preparation, and annual maintenance.
Annual renewal is commonly cited at XCD 12,000, subject to confirmation against the current schedule and any changes in the company’s status or scope.
Annual audit and accounting costs vary by transaction volume, custody complexity, and quality of internal records. A simple outsourced setup may start from USD 4,000-8,000, while active exchanges or custody businesses can exceed that range materially.
Recurring compliance tooling typically includes KYC onboarding, sanctions screening, blockchain analytics, case management, and Travel Rule messaging. Even a small VASP should budget for this separately from legal fees.
An SVG crypto license is only the entry point. The real regulatory test starts after approval, when the company must maintain auditability, AML effectiveness, and regulator-ready records.
The term crypto license in SVG is the market phrase, but the legal regime is better understood as a VASP registration/authorization under Saint Vincent and the Grenadines virtual asset business law. Founders, banks, PSPs, and service providers still use the word license as an umbrella term because it is commercially intuitive. The regulator, however, cares about the legal qualification, the activity perimeter, and whether your controls fit the proposed business.
Why this distinction matters:
At RUE, we use both terms carefully: “SVG crypto license” for market clarity and “VASP registration” where legal precision matters. That approach reduces friction with founders while keeping the filing technically correct.
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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
RUE reviews the business model, checks whether the activity falls inside the SVG VASP perimeter, confirms whether SVG is suitable, and identifies entity, banking, AML and token-issuance issues. Duration: 3-10 business days.
We confirm the correct applicant vehicle, incorporate the company, arrange registered office and corporate records, and align ownership disclosures with fit-and-proper and source-of-funds expectations. Duration: 3-7 business days.
We prepare the AML/CFT framework, risk assessment, Travel Rule SOP, governance map, officer appointments, and regulator-facing business plan tailored to the exact crypto model. Duration: 2-6 weeks.
The applicant finalizes platform architecture, custody model, vendor stack, financial projections, capital proof, and deposit planning. Weaknesses at this stage are the main cause of later regulator questions. Duration: 1-3 weeks.
RUE submits the application package, coordinates government fee handling, and ensures the file is internally consistent across legal, compliance, technical and financial documents. Duration: 1 week.
The SVGFSA reviews the file and may issue one or more rounds of questions on business scope, AML controls, officers, source of funds, custody, and client-asset exposure. Realistic review often takes about 90+ days. Duration: 2-4+ months.
After approval, the company completes operational onboarding: audit, compliance calendar, banking/PSP follow-up, internal reporting lines, and launch controls. Licensing is complete only when the business can operate compliantly. Duration: 2-4 weeks.