Crypto Law Profile

Bank of Mexico Circular 4/2019 on Virtual Asset Operations

Bank of Mexico Circular 4/2019 sets conditions for banks and fintech institutions to conduct virtual asset operations only as internal operations, subject to prior Banxico authorization and risk controls. In force; amended by Circular 37/2020.

Mexico Effective Regulation Mar 9, 2019

At a glance

Status In force in Mexico; original circular effective Mar. 9, 2019.
Scope Applies to credit institutions and authorized fintech institutions.
Customer services Direct customer exchange, transmission, or custody services are not eligible for authorization.
Regulator Banco de México reviews authorization requests and third-party outsourcing.

Overview

Bank of Mexico Circular 4/2019 is Mexico’s central-bank regulation for virtual asset operations by credit institutions and financial technology institutions. As of June 30, 2026, Banco de México publishes a compiled text of Circular 4/2019 that includes the amendment made by Circular 37/2020. The original circular was published in the Diario Oficial de la Federación on March 8, 2019 and entered into force the following day; the 2020 amendment entered into force on October 1, 2020.

What Circular 4/2019 Covers

The circular implements part of Mexico’s Fintech Law framework by defining the virtual assets that covered institutions may use and by setting terms, restrictions, authorization requirements, and information requirements for operations with those assets. Its scope is deliberately narrow: it applies to “Instituciones,” meaning credit institutions and authorized financial technology institutions, and it defines a virtual asset operation as an internal operation carried out directly or indirectly with virtual assets.

The practical effect is to keep virtual asset activity within a controlled institutional perimeter. Covered institutions may conduct virtual asset operations only when the activity is an internal operation and only with prior authorization from Banco de México. The circular also states that institutions must prevent the risk of those operations from being transmitted directly or indirectly to clients.

Key Restrictions on Customer-Facing Crypto Services

Circular 4/2019 is especially important for crypto exchanges, custody, and transfer services because it states that operations seeking to provide direct customer services for exchange, transmission, or custody of virtual assets are not eligible for authorization under the circular. That does not describe every crypto activity in Mexico, but it is a major perimeter rule for banks and regulated fintech institutions.

  • Internal operations only: virtual asset operations must support internal institutional processes rather than direct retail crypto services.
  • Prior authorization: institutions must submit authorization requests to Banco de México before conducting covered operations.
  • Customer-risk separation: institutions must explain how they will prevent customers from bearing risk from the virtual asset operation.
  • Defined asset features: eligible assets must have identifiable electronic units, protocol-based issuance controls, and mechanisms to prevent double spending.

Authorization, Risk Management, and Operational Controls

The authorization request must describe the operating model, compliance measures, expected benefits, operating manuals, protocol characteristics, market characteristics, and the processes in which the virtual asset will be used. The institution must also justify why the activity is not a direct service or operation offered to clients.

The risk-management requirements are broad. Circular 4/2019 calls for an integrated risk framework covering business, exchange-rate, financial, operational, cybersecurity, illicit-finance, and reputational risks. Institutions must review that framework at least annually and report newly generated risks and their potential impact to Banco de México where updates are required.

Third Parties and Independent Reviews

The circular allows covered institutions to contract third parties, including domestic institutions and foreign entities, for services related to virtual asset operations, subject to prior authorization. Contracting documentation must address confidentiality, audit access, information requests, continuity measures, and other controls. Circular 37/2020 amended the third-party approval requirement so that the relevant approval refers to the institution’s own administrative body rather than the third party’s administrative body.

Circular 4/2019 also requires an independent third-party evaluation of compliance. The evaluation must be presented to the institution’s administrative body and, where applicable, audit committee, and submitted to Banco de México within the specified time period. These review obligations reinforce the circular’s approach: virtual asset technology may be used inside regulated institutions, but only under a documented, supervised, risk-contained model.

Regulatory Significance for Mexico

Banco de México has described its broader policy as maintaining a “healthy distance” between virtual assets and the Mexican financial system while allowing technological use inside financial institutions where it can improve efficiency or functionality. In that context, Circular 4/2019 is best understood as a binding perimeter and authorization framework for internal virtual asset operations, not a general consumer-facing crypto licensing regime.

Key provisions

Internal operations only

Banks and authorized fintech institutions may conduct virtual asset operations only as internal operations and only within the terms of Banxico authorization.

Regulatory perimeter Mar 9, 2019 Source

Direct customer services excluded

Operations seeking to offer direct customer exchange, transmission, or custody of virtual assets are not eligible for authorization.

Consumer protection Mar 9, 2019 Source

Virtual asset characteristics

Eligible assets must be electronically registered, uniquely identifiable units with defined issuance controls and anti-double-spend protocol features.

Asset perimeter Mar 9, 2019 Source

Authorization application contents

Applicants must describe the operating model, compliance measures, manuals, protocol and market characteristics, risk controls, and customer-risk safeguards.

Authorization Mar 9, 2019 Source

Integrated risk framework

Institutions must maintain an integrated risk framework covering business, FX, financial, operational, cybersecurity, AML/CFT, and reputational risks.

Risk management Mar 9, 2019 Source

Third-party service controls

Third-party services require prior authorization, contract terms, confidentiality, audit access, and responsibility retained by the institution.

Outsourcing Oct 1, 2020 Source

Timeline

  1. Circular dated by Banxico

    Circular dated in Mexico City by Banco de México legal and payments officials.

    Enacted Source
  2. Published in the DOF

    Circular 4/2019 was published for institutions of credit and financial technology institutions.

    Enacted Source
  3. Original circular in force

    The original circular entered into force the day after publication in the Diario Oficial de la Federación.

    In force Source
  4. Circular 37/2020 published

    Banco de México amended Disposition 11 on third-party contracting approval language.

    Enacted Source
  5. Circular 37/2020 in force

    The amendment entered into force on the next banking business day after DOF publication.

    In force Source

Who it affects

Actors

Banco de México

Asset classes

Virtual assets

Official sources

Editorial note

This profile is descriptive and is not legal advice. As of 2026-06-30, Banco de México publishes a compiled text incorporating Circular 37/2020; editors should verify against Banco de México and the DOF before publication.