Singapore MAS DPT Licensing Regime — Crypto-Asset Exchange Business under the PSA
On this page
Regime Overview
Singapore implemented the PSA (Payment Services Act) in 2020–01 , reorganising payment services into 7 categories. One of these is the DPT (Digital Payment Token) services category, which brings crypto-asset buying, selling, exchange, custody, and related activities under a single legal framework. This sits alongside the existing banking licence (Banking Act) and money-transfer licence (legacy MAS Act basis), with MAS (Monetary Authority of Singapore) as the sole regulator. Full FATF Travel Rule compliance and strengthened AML/CFT are baseline requirements, and MAS has explicitly positioned Singapore as an institution-oriented crypto hub. In contrast to Japan’s fsa-vasp-registration-system, which uses a dual FSA + JVCEA structure, the MAS single-regulator model delivers governance efficiency in a notably different way.
Licence Categories: 3 Types
- Major Payment Institution (MPI): for large-scale DPT operators · requirements triggered when monthly throughput exceeds SG$3M or 1 -day balance exceeds SG$6M · applies to major CEXs
- Standard Payment Institution (SPI): for mid-sized operators · below the above thresholds
- Money-Changing Licence: lightweight category limited to currency exchange only
In practice, virtually all DPT service providers end up applying for MPI; SPI serves as an intermediate tier.
Key Licence Holders (as of 2024–2026 )
- Coinbase Singapore (MPI, obtained 2023–10 ) — Coinbase’s APAC base
- Crypto.com (MPI, 2023–06) — major CEX headquartered in Singapore
- Independent Reserve (MPI) — Australia-based
- HashKey Singapore (MPI) — Singapore presence of Hong Kong’s HashKey (operating in parallel with hk-sfc-vasp-licensing-overview)
- Circle (MPI for USDC, 2023–06) — US parent group, USDC issuer
- Paxos + DBS Digital Exchange — banking-group operators (DBS is institutional-only)
Retail Advertising Restrictions (from 2022)
In 2022–01 , MAS issued guidelines stating that “DPT service providers must not promote or advertise DPT trading to the general public,” effectively banning retail advertising outright. Only passive information provision via “the operator’s own corporate website and official app” is permitted. MRT advertising, social-media influencer campaigns, and outdoor advertising are all prohibited. This is the mirror opposite of hk-sfc-vasp-licensing-overview‘s strategy of opening to retail in 2023–08 , and is a clear marker of Singapore’s “institution-centred hub” strategy.
Strategic Positioning
Singapore combines “retail prohibition + mandatory MPI licence + strong AML/CFT” to position itself as a base for institutions, high-net-worth individuals, and companies expanding into APAC. Compared with Japan (fsa-vasp-registration-system · FSA + JVCEA · retail permitted, strict whitelist) and South Korea (korea-cex-five-pillars-comparison · ISMS + bank RWA · retail-centric), Singapore is more institutionally oriented and more stringent. By contrast, Hong Kong’s SFC VATP framework is more retail-facing. The three cities’ differentiated roles form the geographic diversity of APAC crypto regulation. As the Tier 1 hub in global-cex-top10-comparison, the APAC headquarters of Coinbase, Crypto.com, and Circle are all concentrated here. For the full PSA picture see singapore-mas-payment-services-act-overview; for the stablecoin framework see three-circles-stablecoin-mra-framework. For global comparisons see Global VASP regulatory 8 -pole comparison matrix — JP / KR / HK / SG / EU / US / UAE / UK and Global Stablecoin Regulation: Five-Pole Comparison Matrix; for strategic implications see MAS Strategic Implications + Contrast with HK · Circle SG hub + DBS/StanChart Channel.
Sources: Compiled from public information (MAS announcements, PSA legislation public materials, MAS Notice PS-N02, IR disclosures of MPI licence holders, Coindesk Asia reporting)