Quick Facts
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Best fit clients | Marketplaces handling primary mints, secondary trading, royalties and treasury flows. |
| Best jurisdictions | BVI · Cayman · Singapore · UAE |
| License types involved | VASP / MPI / VARA depending on model |
Who is this for?
Marketplaces handling primary mints, secondary trading, royalties and treasury flows. The licensing requirement turns on activity scope and customer geography — see the jurisdictions and licence-stack notes below.
What licences does a nft marketplace need?
The licence stack depends on activity scope and customer geography. The starting set for this service vertical is: VASP / MPI / VARA depending on model. Each component covers a distinct regulated activity — exchange, custody, payment, advisory, brokerage, issuance — and several models stack two or three together. Read the services hub for the full glossary and the regulation guides for the underlying frameworks.
Best jurisdictions for nft marketplace
The credible shortlist is below. Each card opens a full country page with the regulator, capital, timeline and process detail.
Cayman Islands
- Regulator
- CIMA (Cayman Islands Monetary Authority)
- Timeline
- 10–16 weeks
- Min. capital
- Substance-based
Singapore
- Regulator
- Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS)
- Timeline
- 9–12 months
- Min. capital
- MPI: SGD 250,000 · SPI: SGD 100,000
Common pitfalls
- Wrong jurisdiction first. Founders pick the cheapest or fastest, then discover banks won’t onboard them. Banking-friendly jurisdiction first, then optimise;
- Underestimating substance. Resident directors and substantive offices are not optional. Paper presence fails first examination;
- Treating banking as bolted-on. A licence without a working bank account is unusable. Banking strategy is part of jurisdiction selection;
- Ignoring year-one supervision. External audit, AML refresh, MLRO continuity. Calendar from day one;
- Single-jurisdiction thinking. Real operators run multi-jurisdictional structures. Plan two-to-three years out, not one engagement at a time.