Holding Structure for Crypto Business: How to Set Up Your Group Correctly

Holding Structure for Crypto Business: How to Set Up Your Group Correctly

Holding Structure for Crypto Business: How to Set Up Your Group Correctly

🏗️ Corporate Structure · 2026 Guide

Holding Structure for a Crypto Business: 3 Models That Work in 2026

Three proven structures for crypto groups — compared honestly on IP protection, licence portability, treasury separation, and what each model costs to implement and maintain.

5 sections · ~7 min read
IP Holdco
VASP + Treasury
Multi-jurisdiction
📋 In This Guide
3 models compared · ~7 min read
1
Why holding structure matters more in crypto
Licence portability, IP ownership, and banking risk — three factors that make structure decisive
2
Model 1: IP Holdco + Operating entities
Structure and when it works — the default for software-based crypto businesses
3
Model 2: Regulated VASP + Offshore treasury
Separating customer-facing activity from asset management
4
Model 3: Multi-jurisdiction licensing stack
Building a compliant group across EU, UAE, and offshore jurisdictions
5
How to choose — decision framework and common mistakes
Four questions that determine the right structure for your client base and growth plan
Section 1

Why holding structure matters more in crypto

In traditional business, group structure is primarily a tax question. In crypto, it determines whether you can licence, expand, bank, and exit at all. Three factors make structure more consequential here than in any other business type. See our holding and corporate structuring services for how to build these separations correctly from day one.

What goes wrong without the right structure from day one
Three structural imperatives
1
Licence portability

A VASP licence in one jurisdiction does not automatically extend to others. The holding structure determines whether new licences are added cleanly or require restructuring each time. A well-designed group means adding an EU MiCA licence to an existing UAE VARA structure is a subsidiary application — not a rebuild. A poorly designed one means starting over.

Good holding and corporate structuring accounts for this from day one, not after the second licence application fails. The cost of getting it wrong is not just the restructuring bill — it is the months of regulatory delay while a competitor licenses ahead of you.

2
IP and model ownership

The algorithms, protocols, smart contracts, and brand that drive value need to sit in an entity that can be transferred, licenced, and protected — separately from the regulated operating entity. This is not just about tax efficiency: it is what makes a crypto business acquirable, investable, and expandable.

Mixing IP with the regulated entity creates friction at every M&A or funding round. Proper crypto business structuring separates these cleanly from the start. Untangling IP from a licenced entity after the fact is significantly more expensive and time-consuming than building the separation in before launch.

3
Banking and treasury risk

Crypto businesses face banking fragility that traditional businesses rarely encounter. A structure that concentrates treasury in the regulated operating entity creates a single point of failure: if the operating entity loses its bank account — which happens — the business stops. Separation is operational risk management, not tax planning.

The regulated entity handles client flows; the treasury entity holds reserves. This is standard practice in well-structured crypto groups, and regulators generally accept it when the logic is documented. The key is that the separation must be legally clean and commercially documented — not a cosmetic split that regulators will see through immediately.

⚠️
Regulatory scrutiny of group structure
Regulators increasingly look at group structure during licence applications. A holding structure that looks designed purely for tax avoidance — rather than operational logic — creates friction with VARA, FCA, and MiCA regulators. Build the structure around how the business actually operates, then let the tax efficiency follow. The order matters.
Section 2 — Model 1

IP Holdco + Operating entities

The IP Holdco model puts intellectual property ownership at a parent entity level, with licenced subsidiaries operating in each market. It is the default structure for software-based and protocol-based crypto businesses planning multi-jurisdiction expansion — and the most acquirer-friendly structure at exit.

Structure
Structure
How the IP Holdco model is set up
Parent holdco in an IP-friendly jurisdiction
UAE, Singapore, Ireland, or Netherlands — jurisdictions with low effective tax rates on IP income and clear substance rules that regulators understand.
Holdco owns the core IP
Brand, software, protocol, smart contracts, and key contracts sit at Holdco level — not inside the regulated operating entity. This is what makes the business transferable.
Operating entities licenced locally
EU subsidiary for MiCA, UAE subsidiary for VARA, further subsidiaries as needed. Each licenced in its own jurisdiction — Holdco is not the licenced entity.
Operating entities pay royalties to Holdco
Licence fees or royalties flow from operating entities to Holdco. Intercompany agreements must be arm's-length, commercially documented, and withstand transfer pricing scrutiny.
When it works
When it works
Use this model if these conditions apply
Product is software or protocol-based
Not purely service delivery. There must be genuine IP to hold — a protocol, algorithm, smart contract architecture, or brand with identifiable and separable value.
Multiple markets planned
IP ownership centralised at Holdco simplifies multi-jurisdiction expansion — new operating entities licence from the same parent, avoiding fragmented IP across subsidiaries.
Clean exit path is a priority
Selling Holdco transfers the entire group — IP, brand, all operating entities — in one transaction. Investors and acquirers find this structure straightforward and diligence-ready.
IP genuinely created and managed from Holdco jurisdiction
Substance is not optional. Real people, real decisions, real costs in the Holdco jurisdiction. Regulators, tax authorities, and banks all test this — and they compare notes.
📌
Substance is not optional
Post-BEPS and under UAE CT rules, the Holdco must have real activity — people, decisions, costs — in its jurisdiction. A letterbox structure no longer holds up under examination. Budget for genuine holding structure substance from day one. Retrofitting it is expensive and rarely convincing to a regulator or transfer pricing authority who asks.
Section 3 — Model 2

Regulated VASP + Offshore treasury

The VASP and offshore treasury model separates customer-facing regulated activity from asset management. The licenced VASP handles client flows. A separate entity holds the group's crypto treasury, reserves, and proprietary assets. The two are connected by documented intercompany agreements — not by commingling funds.

Structure
Structure
How this model separates operations from assets
Regulated VASP for customer-facing activity
The licenced entity handles all regulated services — trading, custody, exchange — in its licenced jurisdiction. This is where regulatory obligations, client funds, and compliance infrastructure sit.
Separate treasury entity in a low-friction jurisdiction
BVI, Cayman, or UAE ADGM are common choices. The treasury entity holds crypto assets, investment portfolio, and operating reserves — outside the VASP's regulated perimeter.
Treasury holds group assets and reserves
Crypto holdings, investment portfolio, and strategic reserves are held here. This entity does not conduct regulated business — it manages proprietary assets on behalf of the group.
Linked by documented intercompany agreements
VASP and treasury are connected through SPV structuring and arm's-length intercompany agreements — not by commingling. The separation must be legally clean and commercially documented.
When it works
When it works
Use this model if these conditions apply
Business generates significant crypto treasury
Exchanges, yield platforms, and treasury management operations accumulate crypto at scale. Concentrating this inside a licenced VASP creates unnecessary regulatory and operational exposure.
Founders want to separate operational and asset risk
If the VASP faces a regulatory action, the treasury entity should not be directly caught. Clean separation of risk is the purpose — not avoidance of oversight.
Institutional counterparties require a clean operating entity
Banks and institutional counterparties often require that the regulated entity is unencumbered by large proprietary asset positions. This structure satisfies that requirement.
Treasury should not sit inside the VASP's regulatory perimeter
The VASP regulator's mandate covers customer assets and regulated activity. Proprietary treasury management is a separate function that does not need to be inside the regulated entity.
⚠️
Regulatory scrutiny of treasury separation
FATF and regulators are increasingly focused on whether the treasury entity is being used to move value outside the regulated perimeter. Intercompany agreements must reflect arm's-length terms, be commercially documented, and withstand examination. The logic must be operational, not cosmetic — and it must be written down before a regulator asks for it.
Section 4 — Model 3

Multi-jurisdiction licensing stack

A mature crypto group rarely operates under a single licence. Different client bases require different regulatory environments. The stack model builds multiple licenced entities into a coherent group structure — not all at once, but in a sequence that reflects where revenue actually comes from.

🌍
MiCA · CASP
EU hub
MiCA CASP licence
  • Single passport across all EU/EEA member states
  • High compliance and ongoing operational cost — the most expensive licence in the stack
  • Required for EU retail and institutional clients — there is no alternative
  • Usually not the first licence. Build towards it as EU revenue justifies the overhead
🏛️
VARA · ADGM
UAE hub
VARA or ADGM licence
  • Middle East and global institutional access
  • Faster than EU — typically 6–12 months with a complete application
  • Banking still challenging but improving, particularly via ADGM-licenced entities
  • Good fit for exchanges, asset managers, and OTC desks seeking a UAE jurisdiction base
📋
Interim · Low-cost
Offshore licence
Seychelles, Mauritius, BVI
  • Lower cost and faster setup than EU or UAE regulated licences
  • Not a substitute for regulated-market licences — EU and UAE counterparties will ask
  • Useful for non-EU/non-UAE client base or product lines outside regulated perimeters
  • Best used as an interim structure while the group builds towards a primary regulated licence

The stack model works when you have the compliance capacity to run multiple regulated entities in parallel. Most early-stage companies should start with one jurisdiction and build the stack as revenue, team, and client base demand it. See our crypto licensing services for jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction detail.

Section 5

How to choose — decision framework and common mistakes

The right structure is specific to your client base, product type, and growth plan. A structure that worked for the previous client is a starting point, not an answer. Here is how to work through the decision — and the most expensive mistake to avoid.

Four steps to structure your crypto group correctly
Decision framework
1
Map your clients first

Where are your clients, and what do they require of you? EU retail requires MiCA. UAE institutional requires VARA. Global non-regulated business can operate through an offshore structure. The holding structure follows the client base — not tax efficiency, not what worked for the last client.

Get this mapping done before anything else, because the wrong starting jurisdiction means restructuring before the second licence. The cost of getting it wrong is not just the restructuring bill — it is the delay while a competitor licenses ahead of you.

2
Separate what can be separated

IP from operations. Treasury from customer-facing activity. Holding entity from licenced subsidiary. Each clean separation creates optionality — for investment, exit, or regulatory expansion. You cannot cleanly separate these after the fact without significant cost and disruption.

Proper holding and corporate structuring builds these separations in from the start, when they are cheap to implement. Retrofitting them costs multiples more — and the negotiation happens under pressure when it least suits you.

3
Substance from day one

Every entity in the structure needs a genuine reason to exist in its jurisdiction. Real people making real decisions, real costs, real activity. Post-BEPS transfer pricing rules and UAE corporate tax rules both require substance to match function. Build this in from the start.

Regulators, tax authorities, and banks all test it independently. Substance added after a structure is challenged is rarely convincing and always expensive to prove. The test is not whether the structure looks reasonable on paper — it is whether a regulator who shows up unannounced would find evidence of genuine activity.

4
Document the logic

Regulators during licence applications, investors in due diligence, and banks during onboarding will all ask why the structure looks the way it does. The answer must be operational logic — not tax optimisation. Document the rationale before you need to explain it under pressure.

This means a group structure memo, intercompany agreement logic, and a clear articulation of which entity does what and why. Explore crypto business structuring options that come with this documentation built in — not as an afterthought when the question has already been asked.

⚠️
The most common structuring mistake
Founders choose a structure based on what their lawyer did for the last client, not based on their specific client base, product type, and growth plan. Restructuring after a licence application is costly — and sometimes impossible without restarting the application process entirely.
Structure your crypto business correctly from the start
We work with crypto founders on group structure, jurisdiction selection, and regulatory positioning — before the licence application, not after.

Oleg Prosin is the Managing Partner at WCR Legal, focusing on international business structuring, regulatory frameworks for FinTech companies, digital assets, and licensing regimes across various jurisdictions. Works with founders and investment firms on compliance, operating models, and cross-border expansion strategies.