APAC — Australia

Crypto License in Australia

AUSTRAC + ASIC. Australia is moving toward a dedicated VASP regime.

  • Timeline: DCE: 6–12 weeks · AFSL: 6–9 months
  • Capital: AFSL: AUD 50,000–200,000; DCE: none
  • Tax: 30%

Australia is moving toward a dedicated VASP regime. AUSTRAC DCE registration is the standard entry point; AFSL is required for derivatives and managed investments. Below is the quick reference for Australia: regulator, capital, timeline, tax and the lead expert in this market. Detailed requirements, process steps, document checklist and an FAQ follow.

ParameterValue
Regulator AUSTRAC + ASIC
License type(s) DCE Registration; AFSL; Remittance
Minimum capital AFSL: AUD 50,000–200,000; DCE: none
Typical timeline DCE: 6–12 weeks · AFSL: 6–9 months
Corporate tax 30%
Region APAC
Lead expert Layla A. Hassan, Partner — Head of MENA & APAC

Why Australia?

Australia sits in the APAC regulatory landscape and runs digital asset business through AUSTRAC + ASIC. The combination of timeline (DCE: 6–12 weeks · AFSL: 6–9 months), capital threshold (AFSL: AUD 50,000–200,000; DCE: none) and tax treatment (30%) defines the practical envelope. The deeper question — whether the regime fits your model — turns on activity scope, banking access and substance burden.

  • Regulator credibility. AUSTRAC + ASIC provides counterparty-acceptable authorisation for Australia-based activity.
  • License coverage. Categories cover DCE Registration; AFSL; Remittance, mapped to specific permitted activities and customer profiles.
  • Timeline and predictability. Typical authorisation in DCE: 6–12 weeks · AFSL: 6–9 months, sensitive to category and applicant profile.
  • Tax treatment. 30%. Specific exemptions and free-zone rules may apply for qualifying activities.
  • Substance burden. Local entity, qualifying officer and domestic MLRO are typically required.

What licences are available in Australia?

Australia authorisations under AUSTRAC + ASIC cover the following categories: DCE Registration; AFSL; Remittance. Each category maps to a different set of permitted activities and a different capital and substance burden. Mapping your business model to the right category is the first task on any application. Categories cannot be combined retrospectively without a fresh authorisation.

We see most applicants narrow the choice within the first hour of an initial assessment. The remaining decision usually turns on banking compatibility and the speed of regulator review for the chosen category.

What are the requirements for a Australia crypto licence?

Requirements are category-specific but converge on a common structural set. Building these from day one keeps the application timeline honest and avoids late-stage rebuilds.

Corporate

  • Local entity: Australia-incorporated company in the relevant jurisdiction or special economic zone.
  • Office space: qualifying physical office. Virtual offices generally don't satisfy substance requirements.
  • Capital: AFSL: AUD 50,000–200,000; DCE: none paid-up minimum, deposited in a regulated bank with auditor confirmation.

Personnel

  • Resident senior officer: CEO or equivalent must be locally resident and pass fit-and-proper review.
  • MLRO: Money Laundering Reporting Officer with relevant qualifications and time commitment.
  • Compliance and risk officers: may be the same individual at smaller firms but must be evidenced as competent.

Operational

  • AML / KYC programme: written manual, transaction monitoring rules, FATF Travel Rule readiness.
  • IT security: ISO 27001 or equivalent, penetration testing, encryption and key-management procedures for custodial models.
  • Operational resilience: business continuity plan, disaster recovery testing, third-party concentration risk.
  • Insurance: professional indemnity. Custodial models add cyber and crime cover with adequate limits.

How does the application process work in Australia?

  1. Pre-engagement (1–3 weeks). Jurisdiction confirmation, framework selection, gap analysis against the rulebook, banking pre-checks.
  2. Entity formation (3–6 weeks). Australia incorporation, office lease, opening of receiving bank account, capital wire and confirmation.
  3. Application drafting. Business plan, financial projections, AML manual, IT security, operational resilience, fit-and-proper packs.
  4. Submission and regulator review. Formal filing with AUSTRAC + ASIC, response to supplementary questions, on-site interviews where required.
  5. Conditional approval. Permit issued subject to specific conditions. Typically systems readiness and final substance milestones.
  6. Operating licence. Conditions cleared, full operating permit issued, first compliance reporting cycle starts.

What does it cost in Australia?

Year-one budget for a Australia crypto licence breaks down across regulator fees, capital lock-up, legal, AML build-out, substance and insurance. The capital component (AFSL: AUD 50,000–200,000; DCE: none) is typically the largest single line. Legal fees the most variable. Ongoing personnel and audit costs the largest year-two driver.

  • Regulator and government fees. Application and annual supervision fees, payable to AUSTRAC + ASIC.
  • Paid-up capital. AFSL: AUD 50,000–200,000; DCE: none, deposited in a regulated bank.
  • Legal fees. USD 30,000–250,000 for end-to-end licensing on a single category, varying with model complexity.
  • Office and substance. Year-one office, lease deposits and physical setup.
  • Personnel. Resident MLRO and compliance officer. Outsourced MLRO where allowed by the regime.
  • IT and security. ISO 27001 audit, penetration testing and operational resilience uplift.
  • Insurance. Annual professional indemnity. Custodial models add cyber and crime cover.

How is crypto taxed in Australia?

Headline corporate tax in Australia is 30%. Effective taxation depends on entity type, qualifying activities and the use of any free-zone or special-regime exemptions. We model year-two financials at the headline rate and treat exemptions as upside, not the baseline assumption. Exemption rules change. Applicant facts can move in or out of qualifying status at audit.

What documents do you need?

  • Certified copy of incorporation certificate and constitution of the applicant entity
  • Audited financials for the past three years (or projections if pre-operating)
  • Business plan with three-year financial forecast and capital-adequacy model
  • AML/CFT policies and procedures manual, including transaction monitoring rules
  • IT security and operational resilience policy (ISO 27001 or equivalent)
  • Fit-and-proper questionnaires for senior officers, MLRO and ultimate beneficial owners
  • CV, qualifications and regulatory references for senior management
  • Source-of-wealth and source-of-funds documentation for shareholders above 10%
  • Capital deposit confirmation from a regulated bank

Your expert for Australia

Lead expert

Layla A. Hassan

Partner — Head of MENA & APAC

Founding partner since 2019. Previously seven years in-house at a top-3 UAE crypto exchange and at a leading Dubai law firm. JD Cambridge. Admitted in the DIFC Courts and Singapore. Lead authority on UAE virtual asset regulation (VARA, ADGM FSRA, DMCC) and APAC licensing (MAS PSA, SFC VATP, AUSTRAC DCE).

Languages: English, Arabic, Mandarin (working)  ·  Qualifications: JD Cambridge · DIFC Courts · Singapore admitted

Frequently asked

Crypto licensing in Australia

How much does a crypto license in Australia cost?
Year-one budget for a Australia licence is composed of regulator fees, paid-up capital (AFSL: AUD 50,000–200,000; DCE: none), legal fees of USD 30,000–250,000 depending on model complexity, and substance and AML build-out costs. Recurring annual costs include supervision fees, MLRO function, audit and director services. We provide a full year-one and year-two budget on the first call.
How long does it take to get licensed in Australia?
Australia authorisations typically issue within DCE: 6–12 weeks · AFSL: 6–9 months from full application. The bottleneck is usually regulator review queues and fit-and-proper checks on senior officers, not legal drafting. Plan for at least one round of supplementary questions and a possible substance interview.
What is the corporate tax rate for crypto businesses in Australia?
Headline corporate tax in Australia is 30%. Effective taxation depends on entity type, qualifying activities, and use of any free-zone or special-regime exemptions. Always model on the headline rate first, treat exemptions as upside that can be challenged on audit, not the baseline assumption.
Do I need a local director or office in Australia?
Most institutional crypto regimes — and Australia is no exception — require at least one resident senior officer who passes fit-and-proper review, a domestic MLRO, and qualifying physical office space. Substance is the main practical hurdle for cross-border applicants. Virtual offices generally don't satisfy substance rules.
What activities does the Australia licence cover?
Australia authorisations under AUSTRAC + ASIC cover: DCE Registration; AFSL; Remittance. Specific permitted activities depend on category and the applicant's business model. Custody, exchange, broker-dealer and token issuance generally need separate or higher-tier authorisations. Mapping activities to categories is the first task on any application.
Can a foreign-licensed firm passport into Australia?
No general passporting exists outside the EU MiCA regime. A Australia authorisation typically needs either a local subsidiary or — where permitted — a branch authorisation of the foreign-licensed entity. Even where branches are accepted, local substance and a domestic MLRO are usually required.

Sources

  1. AUSTRAC — Digital Currency Exchange Register. austrac.gov.au . Accessed April 2026.
  2. FATF — Updated Guidance for a Risk-Based Approach to Virtual Assets and VASPs. fatf-gafi.org . Accessed April 2026.