If you are building a crypto business, testing a new Web3 product, or exploring expansion into Singapore, there is one question that almost every founder asks at some point:
“Can we operate without a MAS licence?”
It is a fair question.
Because licensing takes time.
It requires capital.
It demands compliance.
And naturally, founders want to know:
- Can we start first and license later?
- Can we operate in a “non-regulated” way?
- Can we structure around the requirement?
At first glance, the answer may seem flexible.
Singapore is known for being innovation-friendly. It has a clear regulatory framework. It supports blockchain and digital assets.
But when you look closely at what the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) actually says—and more importantly, how it applies its rules in practice—the answer becomes much clearer:
In most cases, no—you cannot run a crypto business in Singapore without a licence if your activities fall within the regulatory scope.
However, the real value is not in that yes-or-no answer.
The real value is in understanding:
- When a licence is required
- When it may not be required
- Where the grey areas exist
- And how MAS interprets your business model
Because this is where most founders get it wrong.
The First Principle: MAS Regulates Activities, Not Companies
Before answering the question directly, you need to understand the most important principle in Singapore’s crypto regulatory framework:
MAS regulates what you do—not what you call your business.
This means:
- You cannot avoid regulation by calling yourself a “technology platform”
- You cannot rely on labels like “non-custodial” or “decentralised”
- You cannot structure your way out of regulation
MAS looks at:
- What services you provide
- How transactions occur
- Who controls or influences those transactions
This principle alone answers most of the confusion around whether a licence is required.
What Triggers a MAS Licence Requirement
Under the Payment Services Act (PSA), crypto businesses are regulated when they perform activities involving Digital Payment Tokens (DPTs).
You likely need a licence if you:
- Buy or sell crypto
- Operate a trading platform
- Facilitate transactions between users
- Transfer digital assets
- Provide custody or wallet services
Important Clarification
You do not need to:
- Hold funds
- Take principal risk
If you facilitate or enable transactions:
You may already be within the regulatory perimeter.
Key Insight
Licensing is triggered by function—not ownership, not custody, not branding.
The Cross-Border Rule: Where You Operate From Matters
This is where many businesses misunderstand the law.
Common Assumption
“We don’t serve Singapore users, so we don’t need a licence.”
MAS Position
If your business:
- Operates from Singapore
- Has a team in Singapore
- Makes decisions in Singapore
Then:
You may still require a licence—even if all your users are overseas.
Why This Exists
Under the Financial Services and Markets Act (FSMA), MAS extended its regulatory scope to cover:
Cross-border crypto services conducted from Singapore.
Key Insight
You cannot avoid MAS regulation simply by targeting offshore users.
So When Can You Operate Without a Licence?
Now let’s address the core question directly.
Yes, there are limited scenarios where a licence may not be required.
But they are:
- Narrow
- Fact-specific
- Often misunderstood
1. Pure Technology Providers
If your business:
- Does not facilitate transactions
- Does not influence execution
- Does not control funds
And simply provides:
- Software infrastructure
- Backend tools
- Non-financial services
You may fall outside the regulatory scope.
2. Informational Platforms
If you:
- Provide market data
- Offer analytics
- Publish research
Without enabling transactions:
You are generally not regulated.
3. Passive, Non-Facilitating Models
In rare cases, if your platform:
- Does not influence transactions
- Does not route orders
- Does not connect users to execution
You may not require a licence.
Important Warning
These scenarios require:
Careful legal analysis—not assumptions.
The Grey Area: Where Most Businesses Sit
Most crypto businesses do not fall clearly inside or outside regulation.
They sit in the middle.
Examples include:
- API trading platforms
- Aggregators
- Non-custodial exchanges
- DeFi interfaces
Why This Is Complex
Because even if you:
- Do not hold funds
- Do not execute trades
But you:
- Enable transactions
- Route orders
- Influence execution
You may still be regulated.
Key Insight
The more your platform interacts with transactions, the more likely it is regulated.
The “We’ll Apply Later” Strategy (Why It Fails)
Many founders take the approach:
“Let’s launch first, then apply for a MAS licence later.”
Why This Is Risky
Because:
- You may already be in breach of regulations
- MAS may view your operations as non-compliant
- Your application may face additional scrutiny
MAS Expectation
You should:
Be licensed before conducting regulated activities.
Key Insight
Licensing is not something you “fix later.”
It is something you align with from the start.
What MAS Actually Says (In Practice)
MAS has consistently emphasised that:
- Crypto services must be regulated
- Retail exposure must be controlled
- Financial crime risks must be managed
What This Means for You
If your business:
- Touches transactions
- Influences execution
- Interacts with user funds
Then MAS expects:
Licensing and compliance—not workarounds.
The Hidden Risk: Marketing Without a Licence
Even if you are not actively transacting, marketing can create regulatory exposure.
If you:
- Promote your platform
- Target Singapore users
- Encourage participation
MAS may view this as:
Operating or soliciting regulated activity.
Key Insight
Marketing is part of regulatory scope—not separate from it.
What Happens If You Operate Without a Licence
Operating without a required licence can lead to:
- Regulatory action
- Business restrictions
- Fines and penalties
MAS has increased enforcement in recent years, particularly for businesses operating within Singapore without proper authorisation.
A Practical Test You Can Use
To assess your position, ask:
Do we:
- Enable crypto transactions?
- Connect users to trading?
- Influence execution?
- Move or store digital assets?
- Operate from Singapore?
If the Answer Is Yes to Any of These
You are likely within MAS regulatory scope.
The Strategic Approach (What Smart Founders Do)
Instead of asking:
“How do we avoid a licence?”
Successful founders ask:
“How do we build a business that can be licensed?”
Why This Matters
Because:
- It reduces regulatory risk
- It speeds up approval
- It supports long-term growth
Key Insight
In Singapore, alignment with regulation is a competitive advantage.
How CRYPTOVERSE Can Help
Determining whether your crypto business requires a MAS licence is not always straightforward, especially when your model sits in a grey area.
CRYPTOVERSE helps clients:
- Analyse their business activities under PSA and FSMA
- Determine whether licensing is required
- Identify regulatory risks early
- Structure their operations for compliance
Our goal is not just to answer whether you need a licence.
It is to ensure that your business:
Is positioned correctly from the start—so you avoid costly mistakes later.
Final Thought
The question “Can you run a crypto business in Singapore without a licence?” is not as simple as it sounds.
Because the real question is:
“Does our business fall within MAS regulatory scope?”
And in most cases, if you are:
- Building
- Facilitating
- Enabling
The answer is:
Yes—you will need a licence.
Because in Singapore:
- Innovation is allowed
- Crypto is supported
But only if you operate:
Within the rules—not around them.
And once you understand that, your strategy becomes much clearer.
FAQs
1. Do you need a licence to run a crypto business in Singapore?
It depends on your activity. If you deal in digital payment tokens, provide exchange services, or facilitate crypto transfers, MAS requires a licence under the Payment Services Act. However, certain activities — like pure crypto consulting or non-custodial services — may fall outside licensing scope entirely.
2. What does MAS regulate in the crypto space?
MAS regulates Digital Payment Token (DPT) services under the Payment Services Act 2019. This covers buying, selling, exchanging, and transferring crypto. It also covers custodial wallet services. Activities outside these categories may not require a licence, but legal assessment is strongly advised before operating.
3. Can a crypto startup operate in Singapore without MAS approval?
Yes — but only if your business activities fall outside MAS-regulated DPT services. Non-custodial platforms, blockchain development firms, and crypto advisory businesses often operate without a licence. You must still comply with AML/CFT obligations and relevant Singapore laws regardless of licence status.
4. What is the Payment Services Act in Singapore?
The Payment Services Act (PSA) 2019 is Singapore’s primary law governing crypto and payment businesses. It created a licensing framework for Digital Payment Token services. MAS uses the PSA to regulate crypto exchanges, wallet providers, and transfer services operating in or from Singapore.
5. What happens if you run an unlicensed crypto business in Singapore?
Operating a regulated crypto service without a MAS licence is a criminal offence under the Payment Services Act. Penalties include fines up to SGD 125,000, imprisonment up to three years, or both. MAS actively monitors the market and has issued warnings and enforcement actions against unlicensed operators.