BTCC / BTCC Square / Bitcoinist /
Singapore Slams Door on Crypto Exports—Final Countdown to June 30 Ban

Singapore Slams Door on Crypto Exports—Final Countdown to June 30 Ban

Author:
Bitcoinist
Published:
2025-06-04 09:00:45
6
2

Asia's financial hub draws a hard line in the sand—no more offshore crypto services after this month.


Regulatory hammer drops

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) is forcing crypto firms to choose: serve local clients or shut down cross-border operations. No grace period—the rules take effect June 30.


Crypto corridors collapse

Exchanges scrambling to restructure face a brutal choice—abandon global ambitions or lose their Singapore license. Another win for 'innovation-friendly' regulators who love blockchain... as long as it stays in a compliance straitjacket.


The irony burns brighter than a Bitcoin ATH

Same institutions that praised crypto's borderless future now build walls to keep it contained. But hey—at least traditional bankers can sleep easy knowing their 19th-century payment rails won't face disruptive competition.

License Requirement For Crypto Services

According to MAS, firms that fall under Section 137 of the FSM Act are treated as operating from Singapore, even if most of their work happens overseas.

That means even if token services aren’t your main thing, you still need a license to keep going. No extra time is coming—MAS says they won’t offer any transition period. Acting after June 30, 2025 without proper approval could lead to serious trouble.

Hefty Penalties For Non-Compliance

Based on reports, local token service providers that ignore the rule could face fines up to SGD 250,000 or about USD 200,000. They could also see jail time reaching three years.

Only businesses that already have a spot under existing financial laws—like the Securities and Futures Act, the Financial Advisers Act or the Payment Services Act—can carry on without worrying about the new DTSP rules. That limits how many outfits can still serve overseas clients without significant changes.

Exec Says Licenses Will Be Rare

Hagen Rooke, a partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, warned that MAS will hand out new DTSP licenses only in very rare cases. He said these kinds of services bring extra concerns around anti-money laundering and stopping terrorist financing.

That means most firms will find it hard to qualify. MAS will grant licenses under the new framework only in extremely limited circumstances, Rooke wrote on LinkedIn. He urged local outfits to look at ways to strip out their Singapore links or MOVE parts of their operations elsewhere to avoid falling under these strict rules.

Industry Faces Restructuring Decisions

Small and mid-sized firms that built a global user base from Singapore now face a tough choice: scale back to serve local customers only, or shift their headquarters outside Singapore’s borders.

For many, it may come down to cost. The extra work needed to meet tighter checks could be more than what fledgling teams can handle. Some business owners worry this will push talent away, as engineers and compliance officers might follow jobs to friendlier crypto hubs.

Big players, including established banks or deep-pocketed startups already licensed under other Acts, are better placed to survive these changes.

Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users