How to Get a VASP License in Mauritius: 2026 Guide

How to Get a VASP License in Mauritius: 2026 Guide

🌊 Mauritius FSC · 2026 Licensing Guide

How to get a VASP licence in Mauritius

A practical step-by-step guide to the FSC VASP licensing process: what the licence covers, what you actually need to prepare, what it costs, and how Mauritius compares to VARA and MiCA. Written for founders who want the process, not the overview. See our Mauritius VASP licence service for hands-on support.

VAITOS Act 2021
FSC Licensed
AML/FATF Aligned
4–6 Month Timeline
IOSCO Member
🌊 Section 1

Why Mauritius for VASP licensing

Mauritius is one of the few jurisdictions where you can get a proper VASP licence — covering exchange, custody, and advisory activities — without the cost, timeline, or substance requirements of MiCA or MAS. Here is why it is positioned where it is, and who it actually makes sense for. See also: Mauritius as a Web3 holding jurisdiction and Dubai business relocation alternatives in 2026.

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Three reasons Mauritius works for crypto founders
Regulatory credibility, banking access, and price point
3 key points
1
A properly regulated IOSCO member — not a secrecy jurisdiction

Mauritius is an IOSCO member with a mature Financial Services Commission (FSC) that has regulated funds, securities, and financial services since 2001. The VASP licensing framework, introduced under the VAITOS Act 2021, sits inside a credible regulatory infrastructure — not a newly-created offshore registry designed to issue licences at volume.

This matters for two practical reasons. First, banks — particularly European and Asian correspondent banks — will accept a Mauritius FSC licence as evidence of regulated status. Second, counterparties and institutional clients increasingly require that you hold a named regulatory licence, not just a company registration. Mauritius provides that licence from a jurisdiction that is FATF-compliant and internationally recognised, without the grey-list risk associated with some lower-cost alternatives.

2
Genuine banking access and EU-aligned AML/CFT

Banking is where most crypto licensing jurisdictions fail in practice. Mauritius has a functioning commercial banking sector — MCB, SBM, and AfrAsia are active in the market — and FSC-licensed crypto entities have established a track record of obtaining multi-currency accounts. This is not guaranteed, and you will need to manage the banking relationship properly, but the access exists in a way it simply does not in many lower-tier licensing jurisdictions.

Mauritius also aligns its AML/CFT framework with FATF recommendations — the same international standard that underlies EU AML directives. If your compliance documentation is built to FATF standards, it will largely satisfy both FSC requirements and the due diligence requirements of European correspondent banking partners. This alignment reduces the compliance overhead of maintaining a Mauritius entity alongside any EU-facing operations you run.

3
The price point founders who need regulation actually need

MiCA CASP licensing in Lithuania or Ireland costs USD 100,000–250,000+ in first-year setup, professional fees, and regulatory capital. Singapore MAS licensing for a digital payment token service is comparable. Mauritius FSC VASP licensing runs USD 40,000–70,000 all-in for the first year — and the capital requirement for a standard VASP licence is USD 50,000, not USD 150,000+.

If your primary market is the EU and you need an EU passport, Mauritius is not the right answer — MiCA is. But if you are building a global operation from outside the EU, or you need a regulated base for a holding structure, or you are relocating from a Gulf jurisdiction and want a regulated alternative without the VARA price tag, Mauritius is a seriously under-utilised option. See our full Mauritius jurisdiction overview for the full regulatory picture.

📋 Section 2

FSC licensing framework: what it covers

The FSC issues VASP licences under the VAITOS Act 2021. Before you start preparing your application, you need to know which licence category applies to your business, what legal framework you are operating under, and what the licence actually authorises you to do.

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FSC categories
Licence categories
What the FSC issues and to whom
  • VASP licence — covers virtual asset exchange, brokerage, and investment advice on digital assets. The standard licence for most crypto businesses
  • Digital Asset Custodian (DAC) licence — separate and additional category for businesses providing custody of virtual assets on behalf of third parties
  • A business offering both exchange and custody functions needs both the VASP and DAC licences — each has its own capital requirement and regulatory obligations
  • ITO (Initial Token Offering) licence available separately under the VAITOS Act for token issuance activity
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Legal foundation
Legal framework
What sits behind the licence
  • VAITOS Act 2021 — Virtual Asset and Initial Token Offering Services Act. Primary legislation governing all FSC VASP licensing in Mauritius
  • Aligned with FATF Recommendations — travel rule, customer due diligence, suspicious transaction reporting requirements mirror the global AML/CFT standard
  • English common law jurisdiction — contracts, IP, and corporate governance operate on a familiar legal framework for UK and Commonwealth businesses
  • Mauritius is an IOSCO member — FSC participates in international securities and financial regulation cooperation frameworks
Permitted activities
What you can do with it
Authorised activities under VASP licence
  • Operate a crypto exchange — spot trading, crypto-to-fiat, crypto-to-crypto — for international clients (not solely Mauritius residents)
  • Provide digital asset custody — holding virtual assets on behalf of clients — under the DAC licence category
  • Offer investment advice on digital assets — advisory services, portfolio management, and structured product distribution
  • Issue tokens under the ITO framework — compliant token offering structure with FSC oversight and investor disclosure requirements
🗺️ Section 3

Application process: step by step

Here is the actual sequence — from incorporating your entity to receiving the FSC licence. Each step has real time and documentation implications. Work through them in order; trying to shortcut the incorporation or documentation steps will delay your application, not speed it up.

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FSC VASP application — five stages
Total timeline: 4–6 months from decision to licence
5 steps
1
Incorporate a GBC in Mauritius
1–2 weeks

Your licensed entity must be a Global Business Company (GBC) incorporated in Mauritius under the Companies Act. The GBC is the correct vehicle for international business — it provides access to Mauritius’s tax treaty network and is the only entity type that can hold an FSC VASP licence.

You will need a local management company to handle incorporation, registered office, and company secretarial services. Name reservation, memorandum and articles of association, and initial director/shareholder documentation need to be prepared in advance. Incorporation typically completes in 1–2 weeks if documents are in order.

2
Prepare the regulatory application package
3–6 weeks (parallel with Step 1)

This is the most labour-intensive step and the one that most often determines whether your application is delayed. The FSC requires a comprehensive package including: detailed business plan with 3-year financial projections; AML/KYC policy tailored to your specific business model; compliance manual covering your procedures for customer onboarding, transaction monitoring, and suspicious activity reporting; and source of funds documentation for the applicant and all shareholders above 10%.

The quality of your AML/KYC policy is the single most frequent cause of FSC queries. Have your AML/KYC compliance documentation reviewed by local counsel before submission — a policy that is generic or not tailored to your activity will draw an FSC query round and add 6–8 weeks to your timeline. See our compliance manual preparation service for what the FSC expects.

3
Submit VASP application to the FSC
4–6 weeks for initial FSC review

Once your GBC is incorporated and your application package is ready, you submit to the FSC through your management company or directly. The FSC will conduct an initial completeness review — confirming that all required documents are present and in the correct form — before moving to substantive assessment.

The FSC’s initial review takes approximately 4–6 weeks. During this period, you may receive an acknowledgement of receipt, but the substantive review will not begin until the completeness check is passed. Submit a complete, well-organised package; incomplete submissions reset the clock.

4
Respond to FSC queries
1–3 months (typically 1–2 query rounds)

Expect the FSC to come back with one to two rounds of queries. These typically focus on: clarification of the business model and target market; additional fit-and-proper documentation for directors or UBOs; details of the technology infrastructure and custody arrangements; and further detail on the AML/KYC policy or compliance procedures.

Response time matters — the FSC sets deadlines for query responses, and delays on your side extend the overall timeline. Have your legal and compliance team ready to turn around responses within 2 weeks of receiving queries. Each query round that is handled promptly and completely moves you closer to in-principle approval without an additional loop.

5
Receive in-principle approval and complete capital requirements
2–4 weeks to final licence

Once the FSC is satisfied with your application, you will receive in-principle approval. At this stage, you are required to demonstrate that the minimum paid-up capital is in place — USD 50,000 for a VASP licence, USD 200,000 for a DAC licence. This must be deposited in the GBC’s bank account and evidenced to the FSC.

Following capital confirmation and any remaining conditions, the FSC issues the formal VASP licence. The licence is valid for 12 months and must be renewed annually. The renewal process is administrative, provided your compliance obligations remain current.

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Compliance officer requirement
The FSC requires a locally resident compliance officer or an established local compliance function. A nominated compliance officer — provided by your management company or a contracted local professional — is acceptable for the initial period. This is a condition of the licence, not just of the application, so you need a plan for ongoing compliance oversight before you receive the licence, not after.
✅ Section 4

Requirements: what you actually need

This is the minimum set of requirements for a standard FSC VASP application. If your application is incomplete on any of these points, the FSC will send a query or reject the filing for completion. Work through this list before you submit — not after. Also relevant: our guide to AML/KYC compliance when switching jurisdiction and our holding structure planning service.

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Minimum requirements for FSC VASP application
8 items — all required before submission
Checklist
Incorporated GBC entity in Mauritius
The licensed entity must be a Global Business Company. The licence is issued to the entity — you cannot apply as a foreign company or a branch. The GBC must have a local registered office and company secretary in place before the application is filed.
Minimum paid-up capital
USD 50,000 for a standard VASP licence. USD 200,000 for a Digital Asset Custodian (DAC) licence. Capital must be deposited and evidenced at the in-principle approval stage — it does not need to be in place at application submission, but you must demonstrate that it will be available.
VASP: USD 50,000 · DAC: USD 200,000
AML/KYC policy and compliance manual
Must be FATF-compliant and tailored to your specific business model — not a generic template. Must cover customer identification and verification, enhanced due diligence triggers, transaction monitoring, suspicious activity reporting, and record-keeping. See our AML/KYC compliance and compliance manual preparation services for FSC-ready documentation.
Business plan with 3-year financial projections
The FSC requires a detailed business plan covering your target market, product and service description, revenue model, customer acquisition strategy, and financial projections for 3 years. Projections must be internally consistent and include assumptions. A one-page executive summary is not sufficient — this should be a 15–30 page document.
Fit and proper documentation for all directors and UBOs
Every director and every ultimate beneficial owner holding 10% or more must submit: certified passport copy, proof of address, professional CV, criminal background check, and a personal declaration of fitness and propriety. All documents must be recent — typically within 3 months. Criminal background checks must be apostilled or notarised.
Technology infrastructure description
A written description of the technology platform: exchange engine, custody setup, wallet architecture, key management procedures, cybersecurity controls, and disaster recovery. For custodians, you will need to describe how client assets are segregated. Third-party technology provider agreements should be referenced. The FSC does not require a code audit at application stage, but infrastructure must be credibly described.
Local registered office and company secretary
A Mauritius-based registered office address and a licensed management company acting as company secretary are required for GBC incorporation and are a condition of the FSC licence. This is typically handled by the same management company that administers the GBC.
Compliance officer (resident or contracted)
The FSC requires a named compliance officer who is either resident in Mauritius or contracted through a local compliance services provider. A nominee compliance officer from your management company is acceptable for the initial period. The compliance officer is responsible for AML/CFT reporting and must be named in the application.
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Where most applications get delayed
The compliance documentation — AML/KYC policy and compliance manual — is where most applications stall. A generic policy that is not tailored to your specific business model will draw an FSC query, and that query round adds 6–8 weeks to your timeline. Have your documentation reviewed by local counsel before submission. It is one of the cheapest investments you can make in the process. See our AML/KYC compliance service for FSC-ready documentation.
💰 Section 5

Costs and timeline

Here are the actual numbers — government fees, professional costs, and timeline from decision to licence. All figures are approximate and based on standard applications. More complex structures or custody activities will sit at the higher end of the professional fee range.

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FSC & government
Government fees
Fixed regulatory costs
  • FSC application fee — approximately USD 3,000. Payable on submission; non-refundable if the application is withdrawn or rejected
  • Annual FSC licence fee — approximately USD 5,000–8,000 depending on activity scope. DAC licence carries a higher annual fee than standard VASP
  • GBC incorporation fees — approximately USD 1,500–2,500 paid to the management company, plus government registration fees of approximately USD 300–500
  • Annual GBC management and registered office fees: approximately USD 3,000–6,000 per year depending on service level
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Legal & compliance
Professional fees
Advisory and ongoing compliance costs
  • Legal and compliance advisory for application — USD 15,000–30,000. Includes AML/KYC policy, compliance manual, business plan review, FSC correspondence, and query responses
  • Annual compliance retainer — USD 12,000–24,000 per year. Covers ongoing AML/CFT oversight, regulatory reporting, FSC liaison, and compliance officer services
  • Local company secretary — USD 2,000–4,000 annually for statutory filings, annual return, and corporate governance administration
  • Paid-up capital requirement: USD 50,000 (VASP) or USD 200,000 (DAC) — this is equity capital, not a fee; it remains in the company
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End to end
Timeline
Realistic stages and durations
  • GBC incorporation — 1–2 weeks from submission of complete documents. Can be run in parallel with application preparation
  • Application preparation — 3–6 weeks depending on how quickly fit-and-proper documentation can be collected from directors and UBOs across time zones
  • FSC review to in-principle approval — 3–5 months, including the initial review period and 1–2 query rounds
  • Total: 4–6 months from the decision to apply to licence in hand, assuming no major delays in documentation or query responses

Total first-year cost including setup, legal fees, regulatory capital, and ongoing compliance: approximately USD 40,000–70,000 for a standard VASP licence. This is 50–70% less than a comparable MiCA CASP licence in Lithuania or the Netherlands — where first-year costs regularly exceed USD 150,000 before regulatory capital. If you want to understand how Mauritius fits into a broader multi-jurisdiction structure, see our Mauritius VASP licence service and holding structure planning.

⚖️ Section 6

Mauritius VASP vs VARA vs MiCA

Three real options, three different profiles. This comparison covers what actually matters for founders choosing a jurisdiction: coverage, cost, timeline, banking, and recognition. For a broader licence comparison including AIFC and others, see our full VASP licence comparison guide.

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Mauritius FSC VASP
VAITOS Act 2021 · IOSCO member
Cost-Effective
4–6 months
🌐
Geographic coverage
Global operations, except restricted jurisdictions
No EU passport; regulatory obligation still follows users in regulated markets
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Timeline to licence
4–6 months
Including GBC incorporation, application preparation, and FSC review
💰
First-year total cost
USD 40,000–70,000
Including setup, fees, legal, and USD 50,000 capital requirement
🏦
Banking access
Genuine — MCB, SBM, AfrAsia active
Multi-currency accounts accessible for FSC-licensed entities; relationship management required
🔍
EU / US recognition
Recognised as regulated — not EU-passported
Satisfies institutional due diligence; does not remove EU AI Act / MiCA obligations for EU users
🎯
Best suited for
Global operators, Gulf relocators, mid-size crypto businesses needing cost-effective regulation
🇦🇪
VARA Dubai
Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority
UAE Market
12–18 months
🌐
Geographic coverage
UAE market + global operations from Dubai base
Full access to UAE retail and institutional market; strongest brand for Gulf region operations
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Timeline to licence
12–18 months
MVP approval then full licence; significant compliance build-out required throughout
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First-year total cost
USD 250,000–500,000+
VARA fees, compliance infrastructure, minimum capital, and operational costs in Dubai
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Banking access
EMI and crypto-friendly banks — improving
Traditional UAE banks restrictive; EMI options growing; improving but not yet seamless
🔍
EU / US recognition
Recognised globally — premium brand
VARA licence carries strong institutional credibility; preferred by Gulf-focused institutional clients
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Best suited for
Well-capitalised businesses targeting UAE/Gulf retail or institutional market with significant operational presence in Dubai
🇪🇺
MiCA CASP
EU — Lithuania / Ireland / Netherlands
EU Passport
12–24 months
🌐
Geographic coverage
EU single market — 27 member state passport
The only route to serving EU retail market at scale without per-country registration
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Timeline to licence
12–24 months
NCA processing timelines vary significantly; Lithuania historically faster than most member states
💰
First-year total cost
USD 150,000–300,000+
Legal, compliance build, regulatory capital, local staff, and NCA fees; Lithuania at lower end
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Banking access
EU banking — EMI preferred, some traditional banks
EU-licensed entity opens doors to European SEPA banking; crypto remains sensitive for traditional banks
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EU / US recognition
Highest — full EU regulatory standing
Required for EU retail market access; premium recognition by European institutional investors and partners
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Best suited for
Businesses primarily serving EU users or requiring EU investor base; only option if EU passport is commercially necessary
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How to read this comparison
Mauritius is not the right choice if your primary market is the EU — you will still need MiCA for that. It is the right choice if you need a regulated, cost-effective base for global operations, a holding structure with a real licence, or a bridge jurisdiction while you build toward VARA or MiCA. Many founders use Mauritius as the initial regulated entity, then layer in VARA or MiCA as specific markets demand it. See our full licence comparison for a broader view including AIFC, Seychelles, and other options.
Ready to apply for your Mauritius FSC VASP licence?
Our team handles the full application process — from GBC incorporation to FSC submission, query responses, and ongoing compliance. We prepare the AML/KYC documentation, business plan, and compliance manual that the FSC actually expects, not generic templates.

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.

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