Crypto Law Profile

Germany Money Laundering Act Crypto-Asset AML and Transfer Regime

Germany’s GwG, as amended by FinmadiG, brings MiCA crypto-asset service providers and certain ART issuers into AML scope and adds crypto-transfer/self-hosted-address due diligence alongside EU TFR travel-rule requirements.

Germany Effective Act Dec 30, 2024

At a glance

Status In force in Germany; current crypto-transfer layer applies from Dec. 30, 2024.
Covered actors MiCA CASPs and certain ART issuers are treated as GwG obliged entities.
Travel rule EU TFR originator and beneficiary information rules apply to covered transfers.
Self-hosted addresses Section 15a GwG adds enhanced due diligence for qualifying wallet transfers.

Overview

Germany’s Money Laundering Act (Geldwäschegesetz – GwG) is the country’s core anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing statute. This profile covers the GwG as it applies to crypto-assets, including the crypto-asset service provider amendments made through the Financial Market Digitisation Act (Finanzmarktdigitalisierungsgesetz – FinmadiG) and the German interaction with the directly applicable EU Transfer of Funds Regulation. As of July 3, 2026, the crypto-asset AML and transfer regime is in force, with the current CASP and crypto-transfer layer operative from Dec. 30, 2024.

The profile is a legal-reference summary for readers and editors. It is not legal advice, a compliance checklist, tax guidance, or investment guidance.

How Germany’s crypto-asset AML regime is structured

The GwG establishes Germany’s domestic AML framework, including risk management, customer due diligence, recordkeeping, internal safeguards, and suspicious-activity reporting obligations for covered “obliged entities.” For crypto activity, the current regime should be read together with MiCA terminology, the EU Transfer of Funds Regulation, BaFin supervisory guidance, and Germany’s FinmadiG amendments.

The practical result is a layered framework. The GwG supplies the national AML duties and supervisory hooks; Regulation (EU) 2023/1113 supplies travel-rule information requirements for covered crypto-asset transfers; and BaFin guidance explains how the German supervisor expects covered financial-sector entities to apply the law in practice.

Key provisions for crypto-asset service providers

  • Obliged-entity scope: Section 2 of the GwG now expressly covers crypto-asset service providers as defined by MiCA, where they provide one or more crypto-asset services, with a carve-out for standalone crypto-asset advice. Certain issuers of asset-referenced tokens are also brought into the AML perimeter.
  • Core AML controls: Covered entities must maintain risk-based AML controls, customer due diligence, internal safeguards, recordkeeping, and suspicious-activity reporting processes under the GwG framework.
  • Travel-rule information: Regulation (EU) 2023/1113 extends information-accompanying-transfer rules to certain crypto-asset transfers involving EU crypto-asset service providers. EBA travel-rule guidelines apply from Dec. 30, 2024 and address missing or incomplete transfer information.
  • Self-hosted addresses: Section 15a GwG adds enhanced due diligence for crypto-asset transfers to or from a self-hosted address. Covered entities must assess money laundering, terrorist financing, and targeted financial sanctions circumvention risks and apply appropriate mitigating measures.
  • Supervisory guidance: BaFin’s 2025 interpretation and application guidance addresses crypto-asset service providers, crypto-transfer valuation, ongoing monitoring, and self-hosted-address due diligence in the German AML context.

Status and timeline

The original GwG was enacted on June 23, 2017 and entered into force on June 26, 2017. Germany first expanded its crypto AML perimeter in 2020 when crypto custody business became a regulated financial service and related providers became AML-obliged entities. Germany then used the Kryptowertetransferverordnung as a transitional crypto travel-rule instrument before the EU recast Transfer of Funds Regulation became applicable.

The current profile status is in force. FinmadiG was published in December 2024, and the current crypto-asset transfer framework took effect alongside the EU Transfer of Funds Regulation’s Dec. 30, 2024 application date. Germany’s prior national Kryptowertetransferverordnung expired on that same date, as later announced by the Federal Ministry of Finance.

Jurisdictional impact and related EU framework

Germany remains the jurisdiction for the GwG, BaFin supervision, and national AML enforcement architecture. The travel-rule layer, however, is EU law and applies directly across Member States. German readers should therefore treat this profile as a Germany-specific view of a regime that is partly national and partly EU-level.

Editors may link this profile to the Germany jurisdiction archive, the EU Transfer of Funds Regulation profile, the EU MiCA profile, and future coverage of the EU AML package. The next major review point is July 10, 2027, when the EU AML Regulation is scheduled to apply directly and Member States are expected to have transposed the accompanying AML directive, subject to statutory exceptions.

Key provisions

Crypto-asset service providers as obliged entities

Section 2 GwG brings MiCA crypto-asset service providers into AML scope when they provide covered crypto-asset services, excluding standalone advice.

AML/CFT Dec 30, 2024 Source

Certain asset-referenced token issuers covered

Certain MiCA asset-referenced token issuers are included where the public offer or trading admission is not handled exclusively through a CASP.

Stablecoins Dec 30, 2024 Source

Risk-based AML duties under the GwG

Covered entities remain subject to GwG risk management, due diligence, internal safeguards, recordkeeping, and suspicious-activity reporting obligations.

AML/CFT Dec 30, 2024 Source

EU travel-rule data for crypto transfers

Regulation (EU) 2023/1113 requires originator and beneficiary information to accompany covered crypto-asset transfers involving EU CASPs.

Payments Dec 30, 2024 Source

Self-hosted-address enhanced due diligence

Section 15a GwG requires risk assessment and mitigation for transfers of crypto-assets to or from self-hosted addresses.

AML/CFT Dec 30, 2024 Source

BaFin and EBA supervisory guidance

BaFin guidance and EBA travel-rule guidelines explain supervisory expectations for crypto-transfer monitoring, missing data, and AML controls.

AML/CFT Dec 30, 2024 Source

Timeline

  1. GwG enacted

    Germany enacted the modern Money Laundering Act as part of the Fourth EU AML Directive implementation package.

    Enacted Source
  2. GwG entered into force

    The GwG entered into force under Article 24 of the 2017 implementing act.

    In force Source
  3. Crypto custody AML perimeter expanded

    Germany’s AMLD5 implementation brought crypto custody business into regulated financial and AML supervision.

    In force Source
  4. First KryptoWTransferV applied

    Germany introduced a national crypto-transfer travel-rule ordinance before the EU recast TFR applied.

    In force Source
  5. Recast KryptoWTransferV entered force

    Germany replaced the 2021 ordinance with a recast crypto-transfer ordinance.

    In force Source
  6. FinmadiG published

    Germany published the Financial Market Digitisation Act, aligning national law with MiCA, DORA, and the EU TFR.

    Enacted Source
  7. EU TFR and crypto-GwG layer applied

    The EU TFR became applicable and Germany’s current crypto-asset AML transfer regime became operative.

    In force Source
  8. KryptoWTransferV expiry announced

    The Federal Ministry of Finance announced that KryptoWTransferV had expired as of Dec. 30, 2024.

    Expired Source

Who it affects

Actors

BaFin, European Banking Authority, Federal Ministry of Finance, Financial Intelligence Unit

Asset classes

Asset-referenced tokens, Crypto assets, Stablecoins

Official sources

Editorial note

Profiles the GwG as a Germany-specific crypto AML regime, including FinmadiG amendments and the directly applicable EU Transfer of Funds Regulation. This is not legal advice.