UAE VARA Licensing Regime - Dubai's world-first independent crypto-asset regulator

Confidence: Likely Updated 2026-05-19 Review by 2026-09-22 Sources 1 Machine-translated Original (JA)
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This entry sits under exchanges index. Read it against FSA virtual-asset service provider registration system for peer / contrast context and Japan financial regulation for the broader system / regulatory boundary.

Regime Overview

The UAE issued Dubai Decree No. 111 of 2022 in 2022-03, establishing VARA (Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority). This is presented as the world’s first independent crypto-asset-dedicated regulatory authority, separated from the existing securities and banking regulatory framework and operating as a single-purpose regulator - a key distinction from other jurisdictions.

Its jurisdiction covers the Emirate of Dubai, excluding the DIFC (Dubai International Financial Centre), and extends across free zones. It operates in parallel with the federal-level UAE SCA (Securities and Commodities Authority) and UAE Central Bank, with non-overlapping mandates. The DIFC is separately governed by the DFSA (Dubai Financial Services Authority), meaning the UAE has 3 co-existing crypto-asset regulatory tracks within one jurisdiction.

Licence Categories: 7 types (VASP activity categories)

VARA uses an activity-based licensing framework under which operators select and obtain the licences required for their business functions:

  1. Advisory Services - investment advice and consulting
  2. Broker-Dealer Services - intermediation and proprietary trading
  3. Custody Services - safeguarding customer assets
  4. Exchange Services - exchange matching
  5. Lending and Borrowing Services - lending and borrowing
  6. VA Management & Investment Services - asset management and funds
  7. VA Transfer & Settlement Services - remittance and payments

Full-stack operators often obtain 5-7 categories simultaneously, giving VARA a more granular structure than Japan’s single crypto-asset exchange-business registration.

Key licence holders (2024-2026)

  • Binance - one of the largest Dubai-based operators, VARA-approved
  • Bybit - UAE-based, with strong Dubai derivatives presence
  • OKX - obtained VARA approval in 2024-09
  • Crypto.com - serves both retail and institutional clients
  • Kraken - U.S.-origin exchange expanding in the UAE
  • Coinbase International - derivatives only; spot sits under a separate framework

Competitive positioning

In global crypto-hub competition, a three-way structure has emerged: Singapore MAS (institution-focused, strict) / Hong Kong SFC (retail allowed, limited tokens) / UAE VARA (permissioned full-stack, broadest scope). Dubai is positioned as the most flexible hub because of corporate-tax incentives (0% corporate tax in free zones), retail access, and multiple licence categories. It also functions as a gateway to the Middle East, South Asia, and Africa, and stablecoin issuers such as Tether have pursued UAE-routing strategies.

Relevance to Japan

  • Bybit, headquartered in the UAE, continued serving Japan residents through 2024-11 but fully withdrew from Japan in 2026-03 after 3 FSA warnings (details at jp-foreign-exchange-bybit).
  • OKX holds both UAE VARA and Japan OKJ (jp-exchange-okcoin-japan) licences, following a dual-licensing strategy.
  • VARA licensing has become a kind of “global credibility floor” and can indirectly help when undergoing JVCEA review for entry into Japan.

For international comparison, see global-cex-top10-comparison, hk-sfc-vasp-licensing-overview, and sg-mas-dpt-licensing-overview. For broader regulatory comparison, read alongside global VASP regulatory comparison matrix and EU MiCA CASP regime. For the stablecoin angle, see global stablecoin regulatory five-pole matrix.


Sources: VARA official (vara.ae) + individual company official announcements + Coindesk Middle East reporting aggregated