Violations And Penalties Under The PTS Regulations
Enforcement Framework of the Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE)
What constitutes a breach under the Payment Token Services Regulation (2024), how enforcement works in practice, and whether specific fine amounts are prescribed.
What We Deliver
- Breach Exposure Analysis
- Supervisory Risk Assessment
- Remediation Strategy
- Enforcement Defence
- Governance Maturity Building
- Documentation & Reporting
We advise Payment Token Issuers, Custody Providers, and Conversion Providers on breach exposure, supervisory risk, remediation strategy, and enforcement defence under the CBUAE’s prudential framework.
The Key Finding
Does the Regulation Contain a Fine Schedule?
Critical Finding
Unlike certain other UAE virtual asset frameworks, the Payment Token Services Regulation does not include a standalone schedule of fixed monetary penalties.
There are:
- No predefined AED fine bands in the Regulation itself.
- No tariff table attached to specific violations.
- No automatic penalty matrix published within the Regulation.
Instead, enforcement operates under the broader powers granted to the Central Bank under the Central Bank Law.
Legal Basis
Legal Basis for Penalties
● The Payment Token Services Regulation (Circular No. 2/2024), and
● The Central Bank Law (Federal Decretal Law No. 14 of 2018).
Under the Central Bank Law, the CBUAE may:
- Impose administrative sanctions;
- Levy monetary penalties;
- Suspend or restrict activities;
- Revoke licences or registrations;
- Issue binding supervisory directions.
⚠️ Penalties are therefore discretionary and proportionate, not fixed by schedule.
What Constitutes a Violation
What Constitutes a Violation?
Violations may arise where a person or entity:
A
Performs Unlicensed Payment Token Services
- Issuing a Payment Token without a CBUAE licence.
- Conducting Custody & Transfer without authorisation.
- Providing Conversion services without licence or registration.
- Holding out as authorised when not licensed.
Unlicensed activity is treated as a serious breach.
B
Engages in Prohibited Token Structures
The Regulation expressly prohibits:
- Algorithmic Stablecoins.
- Privacy Tokens used as means of payment.
Issuance, promotion, or facilitation of these token types within or directed to the UAE constitutes a regulatory violation.
C
Exceeds Authorised Scope
- A Custody provider marketing issuance services.
- A Conversion provider implying full issuance authority.
- Combining activities without proper licensing.
- Marketing services not reflected in the licence grant.
Scope creep is a common enforcement trigger.
D
Fails to Maintain Reserve Integrity (Issuers)
Dirham Payment Token Issuers must maintain:
- Full reserve backing.
- Proper segregation of assets.
- Robust redemption capability.
Failure to maintain adequate reserves is treated as a prudential breach, not merely an operational error.
E
White Paper Non-Compliance (Issuers)
Issuers must:
- Produce a White Paper.
- Submit it to the CBUAE.
- Obtain acceptance.
- Publish it appropriately.
- Material misrepresentation
- Failure to update.
- Marketing inconsistent with approved disclosures.
Disclosure breach
F
AML/CFT Breaches
All Licensed and Registered entities are AML Obligors.
Violations may include:
- Failure to implement AML controls.
- Failure to conduct customer due diligence.
- Failure to monitor transactions.
- Failure to report suspicious activity.
AML breaches carry significant enforcement risk.
G
Misrepresentation & Holding Out
Violations may arise where marketing:
- Implies central bank backing of the token.
- Suggests government guarantee.
- Misstates licence or registration status.
- Suggests broader authorisation than granted.
Holding out beyond scope is treated seriously.
Sanctions
What Sanctions Can the CBUAE Impose?
Under the Central Bank Law, the CBUAE may impose:
1
Supervisory Directions
- Orders to cease certain activities.
- Mandatory remediation measures.
- Operational restrictions.
- Capital or reserve adjustments.
2
Administrative Fines
- Monetary penalties determined case-by-case.
- Assessed based on severity, impact, repetition, and systemic risk.
- No fixed fine schedule in the Regulation.
3
Activity Suspension or Restriction
- Suspension of specific Payment Token Services.
- Prohibition on onboarding new customers.
- Temporary operational limitations.
4
Licence or Registration Revocation
- Full withdrawal of authorisation.
- Removal from the regulated perimeter.
- Prohibition from conducting Payment Token Services in the UAE.
Specific Monetary Figures
Are There Specific Monetary Figures?
The Payment Token Services Regulation itself does not prescribe specific AED penalty amounts.
Instead:
- The penalty quantum is determined under the Central Bank Law.
- The CBUAE has broad discretion.
- Fines are proportionate to severity and risk impact.
⚠️ Investors and founders should not interpret the absence of a fine schedule as reduced enforcement risk.
High-Risk Categories
High-Risk Violation Categories
From a prudential perspective, enforcement sensitivity is highest where breaches affect:
🛡️ Reserve integrity
💰 Redemption capability
🏛️ Monetary stability
👥 Consumer protection
⚖️ AML/CFT compliance
📣 Misleading representations
Stablecoin regulation is treated as a monetary matter, not merely a digital asset compliance issue.
Factors
Aggravating & Mitigating Factors
Aggravating Factors
Sanctions may be more severe where:
- The breach is deliberate.
- There is systemic impact.
- Consumers suffer financial loss.
- The entity misled the regulator.
- There is repeated non-compliance.
- There is failure to cooperate.
Mitigating Factors
The CBUAE may consider:
- Prompt self-reporting.
- Immediate remediation.
- Governance reform.
- Full cooperation.
- Strong prior compliance record.
Risk Management
Practical Risk Management Guidance
To reduce enforcement exposure:
- Conduct strict regulatory perimeter analysis before launch.
- Avoid algorithmic or privacy token elements.
- Ensure the reserve is fully structured before issuance.
- Align marketing with licence scope.
- Maintain AML sophistication.
- Implement internal breach reporting procedures.
- Maintain complete documentation of regulatory alignment.
Strategic Conclusion
Strategic Conclusion
Misclassification vs Phased Approach
The Payment Token Services Regulation does not operate on a fixed fine matrix.
Instead, it operates within the Central Bank’s broader monetary supervisory powers.
This means:
- Enforcement is discretionary but robust.
- Sanctions are prudentially calibrated.
- Licence revocation is real.
- Administrative fines can be significant.
- Governance maturity directly influences regulatory response.
For stablecoin projects, violations are not treated as technical infractions, they are treated as monetary integrity failures.
Our Services
What CRYPTOVERSE Legal Delivers
Breach Exposure Analysis
Identify and quantify violation risk
Supervisory Risk Assessment
Map enforcement sensitivity areas
Remediation Strategy
Governance reform and compliance repair
Enforcement Defence
Regulator engagement and response
Governance Maturity Building
Proactive compliance architecture
Documentation & Reporting
Regulatory alignment documentation
FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
No. Monetary penalties are imposed under the Central Bank Law and determined proportionately.
Yes. Licence or registration revocation is within its powers.
Yes. Misstating regulatory status or implying central bank backing may trigger enforcement.
No. They are prohibited under the Payment Token Services Regulation.
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