CBUAE Capital Requirements for Stablecoin Services Providers

Regulatory Capital Under the Payment Token Services Regulation (Circular No. 2/2024)

A practical, article-based guide to regulatory capital for Payment Token Issuers, Custody & Transfer Providers, and Conversion Providers, including the AED thresholds, percentage buffers, and the Central Bank’s discretion to impose higher requirements.

What We Deliver

We structure paid-up capital, regulatory capital composition, and prudential evidence packs for Payment Token Service Providers, aligning your business model, financial projections, and regulatory capital with CBUAE expectations and application conditions.

The CBUAE Approach

Prudential Capital, Not Check-the-Box

Under the CBUAE Payment Token Services Regulation (Circular No. 2/2024), capital is a prudential safeguard. The Central Bank evaluates whether your regulatory capital and financial resources are sufficient to run your model safely and sustainably and to protect customers, including through an orderly wind-down and refunding process.

Capital Composition

What "Regulatory Capital" Consists Of (Capital Items)

A Licensed Payment Token Service Provider’s aggregate regulatory capital consists of:

1

Paid-up capital

2

Reserves (excluding revaluation reserves)

3

Retained earnings

ℹ️ This composition matters because it determines what counts toward meeting the regulatory capital requirement.

Issuer Capital Requirements

Capital Requirements for Licensed Payment Token Issuers (Stablecoin Issuers)

CBUAE imposes a base capital + proportional buffer model for Issuers.

Default Track

Article 13(1)

A. Default issuer capital

A Licensed Payment Token Issuer must maintain at least:

AED 15,000,000 (initial and ongoing capital);

Plus

0.5% of the fiat-currency face value of outstanding Payment Tokens as additional ongoing capital.

This means as issuance grows, the required capital buffer grows with the total outstanding token liability.

Alternative Reserve Track

Article 13(2) linked to Article 22(3)

B. Alternative Reserve of Assets track

If the Issuer is subject to the alternative requirement for the Reserve of Assets under Article 22(3), then instead of the default issuer buffer above, the Issuer must maintain at least:

AED 15,000,000 (initial and ongoing capital);

Plus

2% of the fiat-currency face value of outstanding Payment Tokens as additional ongoing capital.

This means as issuance grows, the required capital buffer grows with the total outstanding token liability.

Article 15(4)

C. Mandatory bank guarantee

In addition to meeting the capital requirement, the Licensee must submit to the Central Bank (with the licence application) an:

⚠️ This is separate from the Reserve of Assets and is an additional prudential protection.

Article 15(5)–(7)

D. Sufficiency, source of funds & wind-down capacity

Beyond numeric thresholds, a Licensed Issuer must demonstrate:

Custody & Conversion Capital

Capital Requirements for Custody & Transfer Providers And Conversion Providers ( Article 14 )

For Licensed Payment Token Service Providers performing Payment Token Custody & Transfer or Payment Token Conversion, capital is tiered by monthly average transfer volume.

A. Tier 1 — High transfer value

Article 14(1)(a)

Monthly Average ≥ AED 10M

Where the monthly average value of Payment Token Transfers initiated, facilitated, effected, directed, or received by the provider is:

AED 10,000,000 or above, the provider must hold regulatory capital of at least:

B. Tier 2 — Lower transfer value

Article 14(1)(b)

Monthly Average < AED 10M

Where the monthly average value is:

less than AED 10,000,000, the provider must hold regulatory capital of at least:

📈

Article 14(2)

C. Step-up rule when you cross the threshold

If a provider in the AED 1.5m tier exceeds AED 10m monthly average transfers for three consecutive months, it must:

Article 14(3)

D. How the monthly average is calculated

The monthly average value must:

CBUAE Discretion

The Central Bank May Require Higher Capital (Article 15)

CBUAE may impose aggregate regulatory capital requirements higher than those in Articles 13 and 14 where, considering the scale and complexity of the Licensee’s business, higher capital is essential to ensure the Licensee can fulfil obligations under the Regulation.

⚠️ Applicants must also provide information on the source(s) of funds constituting the regulatory capital held under Articles 13 or 14.

Capital vs Reserve

Capital vs Reserve — Do Not Confuse the Two

For issuers, the Reserve of Assets is separate from regulatory capital.

Reserve of Assets

Backs token liabilities and supports redemption.

Regulatory capital

Is the issuer’s prudential buffer and loss-absorbing capacity.

CBUAE expects both to be robust, segregated, and auditable.

PRACTICAL CAPITAL PLANNING

What "Licensing-Ready" Looks Like

To be capital-ready for a CBUAE file, applicants should prepare:

What We Deliver

What CRYPTOVERSE Legal Delivers

Capital Structuring

Activity-based tier optimisation (Issuer vs Custody/Transfer vs Conversion).

Regulatory Capital Composition

Capital composition mapping and evidence pack design.

Issuer Capital + Percentage Buffer

Buffer modelling (0.5% vs 2% scenarios).

Article 14 Monthly-Average Modelling

Monitoring and step-up governance.

Bank Guarantee

Structuring support (issuer track).

Prudential Narrative Drafting

Narrative drafting for the application file.

Wind-Down

Wind-down and refunding financial resource planning.

FAQs

FAQs

Do CBUAE capital requirements contain fixed AED figures?

Yes, Articles 13 and 14 prescribe specific AED minimums and percentage buffers for licensed activities, and Article 15 allows the Central Bank to require higher capital based on scale and complexity.

What is the issuer capital requirement?

For Licensed Payment Token Issuers: AED 15m plus a percentage of outstanding token face value (0.5% under the default rule, or 2% under the alternative Reserve of Assets track).

Do Custody & Transfer and Conversion providers have capital tiers?

Yes, AED 1.5m or AED 3m depending on monthly average transfer volumes, with a reporting and step-up obligation once thresholds are exceeded for three consecutive months.

Is the bank guarantee required?

Yes for issuers, an unconditional irrevocable guarantee equal to full paid-up capital must remain in place at all times.

Get Started

Structure Your Regulatory Capital Correctly

From capital composition mapping and buffer modelling through bank guarantee coordination and wind-down planning — we ensure your capital structure meets CBUAE expectations from day one.