Canada’s CSA Crypto Asset Trading Platform Registration and Pre-Registration Undertaking Regime is an operative securities-law framework for crypto asset trading platforms, or CTPs, that serve Canadian clients. As of June 26, 2026, the regime remains in force through CSA staff notices, registration and exemptive-relief decisions, and platform-specific pre-registration undertakings, rather than through a standalone crypto statute.
The framework begins from the CSA and IIROC position in Staff Notice 21-329 that Canadian securities legislation can apply to platforms that trade crypto assets that are securities or derivatives, or instruments and contracts involving crypto assets. It is designed to bring dealer-style and marketplace-style CTP activity into the Canadian regulatory structure while allowing requirements to be tailored through registration terms, recognition orders and discretionary relief.
How the CSA CTP registration regime works
Staff Notice 21-329 distinguishes between CTPs that operate like dealers and platforms that operate like marketplaces. The appropriate treatment depends on the platform’s business model, including whether it acts as counterparty, provides custody, brings together multiple buyers and sellers, or performs marketplace functions. A platform may have to register as a dealer, seek marketplace recognition or exemption, obtain clearing or custody relief, or satisfy more than one regulatory characterization.
In August 2024, the CSA and CIRO reminded CTPs that platforms facilitating trading in crypto assets or crypto contracts that are securities or derivatives are expected to register as investment dealers and become CIRO members. The notice also stated that CSA members do not intend to continue the broad interim approach of time-limited restricted dealer registration for CTPs.
Pre-registration undertakings for unregistered platforms
The CSA introduced pre-registration undertakings in August 2022 for unregistered CTPs that continued operating in Canada while pursuing registration and related relief. A PRU allows a platform to make public commitments to its principal regulator during the review process, but filing a PRU does not mean registration will be granted.
CSA Staff Notice 21-332, published on February 22, 2023, expanded the standard PRU after several crypto-sector insolvencies. The enhanced PRU is a precondition to CSA members allowing certain unregistered CTPs to continue operating while applications are reviewed. Platforms that cannot or will not provide an acceptable enhanced PRU, implement required changes, or advance registration may be asked to off-board Canadian users, restrict access or face compliance or enforcement action.
Core investor-protection terms
- Client asset custody: enhanced PRUs address custody, segregation and trust-style treatment of Canadian client assets, including use of acceptable third-party custodians.
- No rehypothecation: platforms are expected not to pledge, re-hypothecate or otherwise use crypto assets held for Canadian clients.
- Leverage restrictions: enhanced PRUs prohibit margin, credit or other forms of leverage for any client in connection with crypto asset or crypto contract trading.
- Compliance governance: the regime includes commitments related to financial reporting, compliance controls and a qualified chief compliance officer during the pre-registration period.
- Product review: registered CTPs and PRU filers are expected to maintain policies for assessing whether listed crypto assets are securities or derivatives.
Value-referenced crypto assets and stablecoins
CSA Staff Notice 21-333 created an interim approach for value-referenced crypto assets, including certain fiat-backed crypto assets. It permits registered CTPs and PRU filers to continue offering some fiat-backed VRCAs only where applicable terms are satisfied, including reserve, custody, public disclosure, issuer undertaking and crypto asset statement requirements. The CSA extended the final compliance deadline for compliant fiat-backed VRCAs to December 31, 2024; after that date, registered CTPs and PRU filers could offer only VRCAs that comply with their registration, exemptive-relief or PRU terms.
Status and editorial scope
This profile treats the CSA CTP framework as an in-force Canadian regulatory regime. It should be read as a legal-reference summary of regulator-published expectations and platform-specific conditions, not as legal, tax, investment or trading advice. Editors should recheck CSA lists of authorized platforms, reviewed PRUs, banned platforms and VRCA issuer undertakings before publication because platform-level status changes frequently.
