Cayman Islands Virtual Asset (Service Providers) Act is the Cayman Islands statutory framework for virtual asset service providers, commonly called VASPs. The current profile is anchored in the Virtual Asset (Service Providers) Act (2024 Revision), as amended and implemented through later commencement orders, regulations, CIMA policies and guidance. The original Law 14 of 2020 was enacted on May 20, 2020; the first registration phase commenced on Oct. 31, 2020; and the Phase Two licensing regime for virtual asset custody services and virtual asset trading platforms came into force on Apr. 1, 2025.
Scope of the Cayman Islands VASP Act
The Act defines a virtual asset as a digital representation of value that can be digitally traded or transferred and used for payment or investment purposes, excluding digital representations of fiat currency. Virtual asset service covers issuance of virtual assets and business activities conducted for or on behalf of another person or legal arrangement, including virtual asset-fiat exchange, virtual asset-to-virtual asset exchange, transfer, custody, and financial services related to a virtual asset issuance or sale. Virtual service tokens are excluded from the virtual asset definition for these purposes.
Registration, Licensing and Waivers
The Act prohibits a person from carrying on virtual asset service in or from within the Cayman Islands unless the person is registered, holds a virtual asset service licence where required, has a CIMA waiver as an existing licensee, or holds a sandbox licence. Registration remains the route for non-licensable virtual asset services, while Phase Two requires a licence for virtual asset custody services and the operation of a virtual asset trading platform. CIMA’s FAQ states that entities providing those services in or from the Cayman Islands must obtain a VASP licence.
Existing registered persons that were already performing custody or trading-platform services had to apply within 90 days of Apr. 1, 2025. CIMA states that such registered persons may continue operating while a timely licence application is under review, but unregistered, unlicensed or non-waived activity can trigger penalties and enforcement action.
Core Compliance and AML/CFT Requirements
General VASP requirements include annual accounts, CIMA information access, fit-and-proper expectations for senior officers, trustees and beneficial owners, protection of client personal data and virtual assets, accurate communications, AML/CFT/PF systems and procedures, and a designated employee responsible for financial-crime controls. CIMA may require an independent auditor’s report on AML systems and procedures.
Custody and Trading Platform Rules
For virtual asset custody services, CIMA may impose net worth, reporting, disclosure, segregation, insurance, cybersecurity and client-asset safeguarding requirements. Custodians must address how assets are held, transaction permissions, risk disclosures, fees, client access, security safeguards, remedies for unforeseeable loss, and ancillary proceeds. Custodians also may not encumber client virtual asset deposits unless the beneficial owners specifically agree.
For virtual asset trading platforms, the Act allows CIMA to impose requirements on user access, client types, listed assets, listing standards, net worth, reporting, conflicts, price discovery, and controls against manipulation or unfair trading. Platforms must conduct reasonable due diligence on listed assets and issuers, provide understandable risk disclosures, and seek CIMA approval before engaging in virtual-asset-related securities investment business where applicable.
Tokenised Funds and Later Amendments
The 2026 amendment refined the boundary between the VASP framework and Cayman’s regulated funds regime. It amended the definition of virtual asset issuance so that issuance of a digital equity token by a tokenised mutual fund, or a digital investment token by a tokenised private fund, is not treated as virtual asset issuance when done under the relevant funds legislation. The 2026 amendment also repealed the 2025 VASP amendment Act.
Jurisdictional Impact
This is a Cayman Islands financial-services regime profile. It does not replace analysis under the Securities Investment Business Act, Mutual Funds Act, Private Funds Act, Proceeds of Crime Act, Anti-Money Laundering Regulations, sanctions measures, or tax rules. Its primary relevance is to VASPs operating in or from the Cayman Islands, including exchanges, transfer providers, custodians, trading-platform operators, token issuers, regulated entities seeking waivers, and fintech businesses considering a sandbox route.

