- Singapore — MAS DPT Licensing
The Real Cost of a Crypto Licence in Singapore
What it actually takes to launch and operate a regulated DPT business under MAS — a practical cost breakdown for founders, exchanges, and Web3 platforms. The biggest mistake is budgeting only for licence fees. The real cost is in structure, compliance, and operations.
The Real Cost Picture — At a Glance
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MAS operates a risk-based framework — cost scales with activity type, licence category (SPI vs MPI), risk, and complexity
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Application fees (SGD 1K–1.5K) and annual fees (SGD 5K–10K) are the smallest part of the picture
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The biggest hidden cost: compliance infrastructure — AML/CFT systems, governance, and ongoing supervision
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The cheapest structure is the correct one — wrong classification multiplies cost and causes delay
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Do not start with entity setup or platform build — start with regulatory classification and cost modelling
We model your true regulatory cost — including licensing, compliance, governance, technology, and operational spend — so you can structure correctly from day one and avoid expensive surprises.
Where Most Projects Get It Wrong
Singapore Does Not Operate on a Simple Fee-Based Licensing Model — It Operates on a Risk-Based Regulatory Framework
Most founders approach MAS DPT licensing by asking the wrong questions. The cost depends on what the business actually does — not what it calls itself, not what it plans to build later. Under MAS, you are not paying for a licence. You are building a regulated financial institution — with governance, compliance infrastructure, AML systems, operational controls, and ongoing supervision obligations.
The Wrong Questions
"How much does a MAS crypto licence cost?"
"What is the application fee?"
"Can we do this cheaply?"
Cost is not a fixed number. It is a function of structure, activity type, and regulatory complexity.
The Right Starting Point
What does the business actually do in substance — and what regulatory classification does that function require under CIMA's risk-based framework?
MAS evaluates activity type, licensing category, risk exposure, operational complexity, and scale. Fees are not fixed — they scale with risk and complexity. The biggest cost is never the licence fee.
Under Singapore's regulatory framework, you are not paying for a permission slip. You are building a regulated financial institution — with every component that entails. Governance, compliance infrastructure, AML / CFT systems, operational controls, and ongoing regulatory supervision all have a cost. And every one of them is non-optional.
The single biggest cost driver is the licensing category — SPI (Standard Payment Institution) or MPI (Major Payment Institution). That classification determines the regulatory burden, capital expectations, AML and governance requirements, and ongoing supervision cost. Getting it wrong at the outset creates a forced restructuring problem that is always more expensive than correct classification would have been.
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The Core Principle: The more control you have over funds and transactions, the higher your cost and regulatory burden. The cheapest structure is the correct one — proper classification and clean structuring reduce total cost, not by cutting corners, but by eliminating unnecessary regulatory burden from the outset.
What MAS Actually Evaluates When Assessing You
- Your activity type — what you actually do in substance determines the regulatory perimeter, not the labels in the business plan
- Your licensing category (SPI vs MPI) — the single biggest cost driver, determined by activity scope and transaction thresholds
- Your risk exposure — fund control, cross-border transactions, and product complexity all increase regulatory burden and cost
- Your operational complexity and scale — transaction profile, customer base, and technology architecture all factor into MAS's assessment
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Risk-Based
MAS assesses activity type, category, risk exposure, complexity, and scale — not a flat fee schedule
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SGD 1K–10K
The visible licence fees — always the smallest line item in a realistic MAS DPT cost model
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Ongoing, Not One-Time
Compliance is a permanent operating cost — not an expense that ends at licence approval
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Classification First
Regulatory classification and cost modelling — before entity setup, platform build, or application
Step 1 — What Type of Crypto Business Are You?
SPI vs MPI — The Single Biggest Cost Driver in the Singapore Framework
The distinction between a Standard Payment Institution (SPI) and a Major Payment Institution (MPI) is the most important regulatory classification decision for any Singapore DPT business. The category determines the compliance burden, capital expectations, governance requirements, and the total cost profile of the licensed entity.
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Standard Payment Institution
SPI — Lower Cost Tier
Typically Applies To
- Limited-scope platforms with narrower transaction flows
- Early-stage crypto businesses below MPI thresholds
- Models with lower monthly transaction volumes
Application Fee (one-time)
SGD 1,000
Annual Licence Fee
SGD 5,000
✔ Lower structural complexity
✔ Reduced operational layers
⚠ Still requires full compliance readiness
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Major Payment Institution
MPI — Higher Cost Tier
Typically Applies To
- Exchanges and brokerages at scale
- Custody models with significant client asset exposure
- Crypto plus payments ecosystems with complex fund flows
- Platforms exceeding SPI transaction thresholds
Application Fee (one-time)
SGD 1,500
Annual Licence Fee
SGD 10,000
⚠ Higher regulatory scrutiny from MAS
⚠ Full institutional governance expectations
⚠ Stronger AML/CFT and technology requirements
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The Critical Classification Rule
The more control you have over funds and transactions, the higher your cost and regulatory burden. Fund control is the single most important determinant of licensing category and total cost.
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The Licence Fee Is Not the Cost. The application fees (SGD 1,000 for SPI, SGD 1,500 for MPI) and annual licence fees (SGD 5,000 for SPI, SGD 10,000 for MPI) are the smallest part of the total cost picture. They are the entry price to the regulatory framework — not the measure of what compliance, governance, technology, and capital actually cost to build and maintain.
Step 3 — The Real Cost Drivers (What People Miss)
This Is Where the Actual Budget Lives
The six cost categories below represent the areas where founders consistently underestimate total cost — and where the most damaging budget surprises emerge after the application process has already begun. Each is non-optional, each has an ongoing component, and each scales with the activity type and risk profile of the business.
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⭐ Foundation Cost
Legal & Structuring Costs
Regulatory classification, SPI vs MPI strategy, entity structuring, business model alignment, and documentation drafting are the foundation costs that determine every other cost category. Poor structuring at this stage creates a forced restructuring problem later — which is always more expensive than getting the structure right from the outset.
Covers
- Regulatory classification — SPI vs MPI determination
- Entity structuring and incorporation strategy
- Business model alignment with MAS expectations
- Application documentation drafting and review
Why This Is Critical
Applying for the wrong licence type — or building an entity structure that does not support the correct classification — creates a restructuring problem that costs multiples of what correct classification would have cost at the outset.
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Poor structuring = forced restructuring later. This is the most preventable and most expensive mistake in the Singapore MAS licensing process.
02
⭐ Most Scrutinised
AML / CFT Compliance Infrastructure
AML / CFT infrastructure is one of the most heavily scrutinised areas by MAS — and one of the most consistently underestimated cost items. It is not optional, and it is not a one-time build. It is an ongoing, evolving compliance function that requires dedicated people, technology systems, and governance oversight from day one of licensing.
Systems Required
- KYC onboarding systems and customer verification
- Transaction monitoring and alert management
- Sanctions screening — real-time and retrospective
- Travel Rule compliance capability for DPT transfers
Mandatory Roles
- Compliance Officer — with direct MAS reporting responsibilities
- MLRO (Money Laundering Reporting Officer)
- Risk oversight function — second-line governance
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These roles must be genuinely operational — MAS assesses whether they are actively engaged in the compliance function, not nominally appointed. Each creates an ongoing salary or service cost that is a permanent part of the compliance budget.
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Ongoing Obligation
Governance & Management Structure
MAS expects accountable leadership, clear reporting lines, and fit-and-proper management. Governance is not a setup cost — it creates ongoing staffing costs, governance management obligations, and internal reporting requirements that persist for the life of the licence and scale as the business grows.
MAS Governance Expectations
- Accountable leadership with genuine decision-making authority
- Clear reporting lines from compliance to board and senior management
- Fit-and-proper assessments for all key persons and directors
- Board-level oversight of compliance and risk function
Ongoing Cost Components
- Senior management and key person staffing costs
- Governance management and secretarial obligations
- Internal reporting infrastructure to MAS
- Ongoing fit-and-proper monitoring for key persons
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Governance costs are recurring — they appear in every annual budget for the life of the entity. Management substance is a core MAS licensing criterion — nominal leadership does not satisfy the requirement.
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Often Underestimated
Technology & Cybersecurity
Technology and security requirements are consistently underestimated — particularly where teams approach regulatory compliance as a documentation exercise. MAS places significant emphasis on operational technology resilience. For custody and exchange models, the requirements are substantially more intensive and include asset-specific infrastructure extending well beyond standard cyber controls.
All DPT Businesses Need
- Cybersecurity framework aligned to MAS Technology Risk Management Guidelines
- System audits and technology risk assessments
- Access controls and privileged access management
- Incident response capability and regulatory notification procedures
Additionally for Custody / Exchange Models
- Key management systems — hot and cold wallet architecture
- Client asset segregation infrastructure and controls
- Daily reconciliation processes and audit trail systems
- Third-party technology security assessments and penetration testing
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Technology requirements for custody and exchange models are significantly more intensive than simpler DPT models. This is one of the most common areas of cost underestimation in early-stage MAS licensing budgets.
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Financial Baseline
Capital & Financial Buffer
MAS expects minimum capital adequacy for both SPI and MPI categories, plus an operational runway that demonstrates financial sustainability. Minimum capital is not enough — MAS assesses financial strength holistically, including the adequacy of the capital base relative to the operational complexity and risk profile of the business model.
Indicative Capital Expectations
- Minimum base capital requirements — SPI vs MPI thresholds differ materially
- Operational runway demonstrating financial sustainability beyond the minimum
- Capital adequacy assessed against the transaction volume, risk exposure, and complexity of the model
- Financial sustainability reviewed as part of the overall MAS licensing assessment
Why Minimum Capital Is Not Enough
MAS assesses financial strength holistically — not just whether the minimum capital threshold is met on paper. A business that meets the minimum capital requirement but has insufficient operational runway or a capital base that appears inadequate for the scale of its proposed activities will face additional scrutiny during the licensing review.
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Budget capital with meaningful headroom above the minimum requirement — particularly for MPI models where the risk profile and transaction complexity justify a stronger financial buffer.
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Permanent Operating Cost
Operational & Ongoing Compliance Costs
Compliance is ongoing — not one-time. Once licensed, the business carries a permanent operational compliance cost covering regulatory reporting, compliance monitoring, audit readiness, and ongoing internal controls. These costs do not diminish after licensing — they increase as the business scales and MAS's supervision expectations evolve with the growth of the DPT sector.
Ongoing Obligations Include
- Regulatory reporting to MAS — periodic and event-driven submissions
- Annual audit readiness and external audit costs
- Compliance monitoring programme — continuous, not one-time
- Internal controls review and management attestation
- AML programme updates, training, and refreshment
- Technology security reviews and ongoing penetration testing
The Year 1 vs Year 2+ Budget Gap
Founders often budget for Year 1 licensing costs but materially underestimate the ongoing annual compliance spend. A MAS-licensed DPT business carries a permanent cost base — compliance officer or service, audit fees, technology maintenance, regulatory reporting infrastructure, and annual MAS licence fees — that continues indefinitely and typically increases as the business grows.
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Build both a Year 1 budget and a Year 2+ steady-state compliance budget. The ongoing compliance cost base is the cost of staying inside the MAS-regulated perimeter — not an optional expense.
The Biggest Cost Mistake — and What Actually Reduces Cost
The Biggest Mistake Is Not Overspending — It Is Choosing the Wrong Regulatory Strategy
The businesses that spend the most on MAS DPT licensing are often those that made the wrong classification or structuring decision at the outset. The businesses that spend the least — relative to their model — are those that classified correctly, structured cleanly, and avoided unnecessary regulatory burden from day one.
✕ The Common Mistakes That Multiply Cost
- Applying for the wrong licence type — seeking MPI when SPI is sufficient, or underestimating the MPI obligation when the model clearly requires it
- Underestimating compliance infrastructure costs — treating AML/CFT as a documentation step rather than a permanent operational function
- Ignoring ongoing regulatory obligations — building a Year 1 licensing budget without a Year 2+ operating compliance budget
- Building the wrong entity structure before obtaining regulatory classification advice — then discovering the structure must be unwound
- Starting with entity setup, platform build, or application before determining the correct regulatory category and cost model
Result: delayed approval, forced restructuring, wasted capital, regulatory exposure — all of which cost more than correct classification would have at the outset.
✔ What Actually Reduces Your Cost
- Correct classification — determining SPI vs MPI before any structure is built, based on the actual activity type and transaction profile
- Clean structuring — aligning the entity design, governance model, and operating architecture with the correct licensing category from the outset
- Choosing the right licence — where the business model can be structured to require SPI rather than MPI, that classification saves materially across every cost category
- Aligning the business model with regulation — designing the operating model around the regulatory framework, not retrofitting compliance onto a model built without it
- Starting with regulatory classification and cost modelling — before entity setup, platform build, or any capital commitment that locks in the wrong structure
The cheapest structure is the correct one. Proper classification reduces cost — not by cutting corners, but by eliminating unnecessary regulatory burden that flows from getting the classification wrong.
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Do Not Start With Entity Setup. If you are planning a Singapore DPT business: do not start with entity setup, platform build, or licence application. Start with regulatory classification and cost modelling. The regulatory category determines the structure — and the structure must be right before any capital is committed to building it.
How We Help
We Don't Just Tell You What the Fees Are — We Help You Understand What You Need, What You Can Avoid, and How to Structure It Properly
Our Singapore MAS DPT support covers every component of the cost picture — from regulatory classification and full cost modelling through to governance structuring, AML / compliance framework design, full MAS application support, and ongoing advisory.
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Regulatory Classification (SPI vs MPI)
We conduct the regulatory classification analysis — determining whether the business model requires SPI or MPI licensing, identifying where the transaction threshold and activity scope criteria are crossed, and advising on structuring options where classification is not pre-determined by the operating model.
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Full Cost Modelling — Setup and Ongoing
We build the full cost model — covering licensing fees, legal structuring costs, AML infrastructure build, governance and staffing costs, technology requirements, capital buffer planning, and ongoing supervision obligations — giving the board a complete, realistic budget before any commitment is made.
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Capital Planning Strategy
We model the capital requirements for the specific activity type and scale — advising on the capital structure, the operational runway required above the minimum threshold, and the buffer needed to satisfy MAS's holistic assessment of financial strength for the model's risk profile.
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Governance Structuring
We design the management structure, key person appointment strategy, fit-and-proper assessment process, and governance framework required by MAS — including the reporting lines, internal oversight architecture, and ongoing governance management obligations that apply from the first day of licensing.
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AML / Compliance Framework Design
We design the AML / CFT framework — including the KYC onboarding systems, transaction monitoring logic, sanctions screening architecture, Travel Rule capability, Compliance Officer and MLRO appointment, and the ongoing AML programme that MAS scrutinises most closely throughout licensing and supervision.
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Full MAS Application Support & Ongoing Advisory
We manage the full MAS DPT application process — from regulatory classification and documentation build through to submission, MAS engagement, and approval — and provide ongoing compliance advisory for the life of the licence, covering regulatory changes, supervision readiness, and post-approval obligations.
From Regulatory Classification Through to MAS Licence — Full Singapore DPT Cost & Structuring Support
- We prevent misclassification — the most expensive and most preventable mistake in Singapore DPT licensing — by conducting the SPI vs MPI analysis before any structure is built
- We reduce unnecessary cost — by identifying where SPI is sufficient and where MPI is genuinely required, eliminating avoidable regulatory burden from the outset
- We design regulator-ready structures — governance, AML, capital, and technology frameworks aligned to MAS's expectations for the specific activity type and risk profile
- We focus on approval, not theory — building and submitting MAS DPT applications that are complete, credible, and commercially realistic from first draft to MAS approval
The cost of a Singapore crypto licence is not a number. It is a function of your structure. Get the structure right — and the cost becomes manageable. Get it wrong — and the cost multiplies later.
FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions — MAS Crypto Licensing Costs
It depends on your business model. The visible licence fees are low — SGD 1,000 to 1,500 application fee and SGD 5,000 to 10,000 annual fee. But compliance infrastructure and governance drive the real cost. A lean early-stage DPT model can be licensed at a moderate total cost if structured correctly. A full-scale exchange or custody platform with complex fund flows, AML requirements, and institutional governance expectations carries a significantly higher total cost profile — approaching institution-level build cost. The comparison is not between cheap and expensive jurisdictions — it is between the right structure and the wrong structure for the specific business model.
Compliance infrastructure — especially AML / CFT systems and governance. The licence fee is always the smallest line item in a realistic MAS DPT budget. The larger and more persistent costs are: AML programme build and ongoing management, Compliance Officer and MLRO appointment, management and key person staffing, technology security systems and ongoing audits, and annual MAS supervision fees. These are permanent operating costs that continue indefinitely — not one-time expenses that end at licensing. Founders who budget only for the licence fee consistently encounter a materially larger total cost picture once the full compliance and operational requirements are modelled.
Yes. Proper structuring can significantly reduce total cost. The most impactful structuring decisions are: whether the business model genuinely requires MPI licensing or can be structured to qualify as SPI, how the operating model is designed relative to MAS’s transaction threshold and activity scope criteria, and whether the entity structure is aligned with the correct licensing category from the outset. Getting classification right before building the structure eliminates the restructuring cost that is the most common and most expensive outcome of incorrect early-stage classification decisions.
No. Your licence depends on your activities and scale. The SPI category applies to businesses with more limited transaction volumes and narrower activity scope. The MPI category applies to businesses exceeding defined transaction thresholds or carrying on a broader range of payment services — typically exchanges, brokerages at scale, custody models, and crypto plus payments ecosystems. The specific threshold and activity scope criteria determine which category applies. This must be assessed on the basis of the actual operating model — not the projected future model or the labels applied to the business in marketing materials.
Start with regulatory classification and cost modelling — not entity setup, platform build, or licence application. The regulatory category determines the compliance burden, capital requirements, governance structure, AML obligations, and total licensing cost. Any of those structural elements built before the classification is confirmed risks being built incorrectly — creating a forced restructuring cost that exceeds what correct classification would have cost at the start. Once the classification is confirmed and the cost model is built, the entity structure, governance design, and AML framework can all be designed correctly from day one, eliminating the most common source of avoidable cost in the Singapore MAS licensing process.
Ready to Understand Your Real Singapore Licensing Cost?
Book a Cost Assessment
We will analyse your business model, determine your licensing category, estimate your true cost, and give you a clear execution roadmap — before you commit capital, build structure, or file an application.