Key Highlights
You’ve spent weeks comparing free zones. One looks solid for your industry. Another is more affordable. You’ve even gotten a quote or two. In your head, you’re already six months away from running a legal crypto trading operation in Dubai.
Then a lawyer friend sends you a two-line message: “A free zone trade license alone won’t let you operate a crypto business in Dubai. You need a VARA VASP license before you can touch a single transaction.”
Your timeline just got a lot more complicated.
Here’s the thing: this isn’t a bureaucratic technicality.
In October 2025, VARA fined 19 firms for operating unlicensed virtual asset activities in Dubai. The city is serious about compliance, and so is the opportunity. Dubai is now the world’s single largest licensed market for virtual assets, with transaction volumes hitting AED 2.5 trillion ($680 billion) in 2025 alone.
This guide tells you exactly what license you need, which authority issues it, what the process looks like, and what it’ll realistically cost you.
VARA stands for the Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority. It was established in March 2022 under Dubai Law No. 4 of 2022, making it the world’s first standalone regulator built exclusively for virtual assets.
It operates under the Dubai World Trade Centre Authority and covers all of Dubai’s mainland and every Dubai free zone, with one exception: the DIFC. If your company is inside DIFC, the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA) governs you instead, not VARA.
Here’s a detail that almost never gets explained clearly: VARA has been delegated the Securities and Commodities Authority’s (SCA) powers for Dubai. That means your VARA license operates under the same federal framework, giving you UAE-wide regulatory coverage, not just Dubai.
There’s no blanket crypto license in Dubai. VARA licenses eight specific regulated activities, and you apply only for the ones your business actually performs.
VA Activity | What It Covers |
Advisory Services | Investment advice on virtual assets |
Broker-Dealer Services | Executing trades on behalf of clients |
Custody Services | Safeguarding client virtual assets |
Exchange Services | Operating a crypto exchange platform |
Lending and Borrowing Services | VA-backed lending products |
Management and Investment Services | Portfolio management for clients |
Transfer and Settlement Services | Processing VA transfers |
VA Issuance | Token issuance and related activities |
For a crypto trading company, your two most relevant activities are Exchange Services and Broker-Dealer Services. You can apply for multiple activities under one VASP license, with one firm exception: Custody Services must sit in a completely separate legal entity with its own standalone license.
One point most founders miss: if you’re trading your own portfolio without involving client funds, that’s proprietary trading. Proprietary trading is not a licensed VA Activity under VARA. It falls under a separate registration category, and VARA requires a distinct entity registration for this activity.
In February 2026, Animoca Brands received a VASP license from VARA authorizing Broker-Dealer Services and Management and Investment Services, a real example of how the licensing process works for established global firms.
This is where a lot of founders get a surprise. VARA publishes specific paid-up capital thresholds in its Company Rulebook, and the figures for Exchange Services are significant.
VA Activity | Minimum Paid-Up Capital |
Advisory Services | AED 100,000 |
Broker-Dealer (with VARA-licensed custody) | Higher of AED 400,000 or 15% of fixed annual overheads |
Broker-Dealer (all other instances) | Higher of AED 600,000 or 25% of fixed annual overheads |
Exchange Services (with VARA-licensed custody) | Higher of AED 800,000 or 15% of fixed annual overheads |
Exchange Services (all other instances) | Higher of AED 1,500,000 or 25% of fixed annual overheads |
Custody Services | Higher of AED 600,000 or 25% of fixed annual overheads |
Lending and Borrowing Services | Higher of AED 500,000 or 25% of fixed annual overheads |
If you’re applying for multiple activities, each one carries its own capital requirement calculated independently. You can’t pool the same capital across Exchange Services and Broker-Dealer Services. Capital must be held in a trust account at a UAE-licensed bank with VARA as the beneficiary or via a surety bond from a UAE-authorized surety company.
Disclaimer: All capital requirements, fees, and supervision charges are subject to change. Always verify current figures directly on VARA’s official Rulebook portal and through a qualified regulatory adviser before making financial commitments.
The full process runs in two formal stages. Plan for 6 to 12 months from your IDQ submission to a live license.
Step 1. Choose your Dubai jurisdiction. You can set up through Dubai Economy and Tourism (DET) for the mainland or any Dubai free zone excluding DIFC. Free zones offer 100% foreign ownership and 0% personal income tax. Physical office space in Dubai is non-negotiable. A virtual address won’t satisfy VARA’s requirements.
Step 2. Submit the Initial Disclosure Questionnaire (IDQ). The IDQ goes to your chosen authority, either DET or your free zone. It doesn’t go directly to VARA. It covers your business plan, beneficial ownership, and senior management details. Fifty percent of your license application fee is due here.
Step 3. Receive your Approval to Incorporate. If VARA’s satisfied, it issues an ATI, allowing you to finalize incorporation, sign your lease, and hire staff. You still can’t start any virtual asset activity. That right only comes with the full VASP license.
Step 4. Submit your full documentation package. After ATI, VARA provides a specific checklist. The official non-exhaustive document list includes:
Step 5. VARA reviews and engages. VARA gives direct feedback, including meetings, interviews, and further document requests. How thoroughly you’ve prepared here directly determines how long this stage takes.
Step 6. Pay remaining fees and receive your license. The remaining 50% of application fees plus first-year supervision fees become payable before your license is issued. Fees are published in Schedule 2 of the Virtual Assets and Related Activities Regulations 2023.
Receiving your license is where your compliance obligations begin, not end. As a VARA-licensed VASP, you must comply with four mandatory rulebooks continuously:
You’ll also comply with your activity-specific rulebooks, Exchange Services and/or Broker-Dealer Services, depending on your licensed activities. Compliance isn’t a one-time gate. It’s built into how you run your business every single day.
No. A trade license doesn’t authorize any virtual asset activity. You need a VARA VASP license before you can legally operate. VARA fined 19 firms for unlicensed operations in October 2025 alone.
2. Do I need a VARA license for proprietary crypto trading?
No. Proprietary trading, meaning investing your own portfolio in virtual assets, is not a licensed VA Activity under VARA. It falls under a separate registration category. A distinct entity registration is required for this activity.
3. How long does the VARA licensing process take?
Plan for 6 to 12 months from IDQ submission to full license. Documentation quality and business complexity directly affect your timeline.
4. Does a VARA license cover UAE-wide operations?
Yes. VARA has been delegated the SCA’s powers for Dubai, meaning your VARA license operates within the same federal regulatory framework that covers the entire UAE.
5. Can Custody Services be bundled with my Exchange Services license?
No, Custody Services require a completely separate legal entity with its own standalone VARA license.
6. Where are VARA’s fees and capital requirements published?
Fees are in Schedule 2 of the Virtual Assets and Related Activities Regulations 2023. Capital requirements are in the Company Rulebook.
Getting a VARA license involves a lot of moving parts: choosing the right Dubai jurisdiction, structuring your ownership to meet VARA’s Fit and Proper standards, building a compliant Regulatory Business Plan, preparing a full documentation package, and managing a 6 to 12 month process where one documentation gap can reset your entire timeline.
At JSB Incorporation, we support entrepreneurs through end-to-end business setup across 24+ UAE jurisdictions, including crypto-ready free zones with the infrastructure VARA expects.
We manage your jurisdiction selection, corporate structure, document preparation, and application from IDQ through to your final license. Transparent pricing. No surprises. You focus on building your business. We handle the regulatory path.
Book your free consultation call today with the experts of JSB Incorporation to learn more
Office 2505, 25th Floor, Regal Tower, Business Bay, Dubai, UAE P.O Box 27614.
+971 4 824 4842
info@jsbincorporation.com