Crypto Law Profile

UAE Cabinet Resolution No. 111 of 2022 Virtual Assets Regulation

UAE federal resolution establishing the regulatory perimeter for virtual asset activities and VASPs, including licensing, AML/CFT, cybersecurity, local-authority coordination and penalties.

United Arab Emirates Effective Regulation Jan 14, 2023

At a glance

Status In force since Jan. 14, 2023; UAE portal lists the resolution as active.
Federal regulator SCA functions now read with the Capital Market Authority transition from Jan. 1, 2026.
Licensed activities Platform operation, exchange, transfer, brokerage, custody and management services.
Key exclusions Financial free zones, payment VAs under CBUAE and digital securities/commodities rules.

Overview

Cabinet Resolution No. (111) of 2022 Regulating Virtual Assets and the Related Service Providers is the United Arab Emirates’ federal framework for virtual asset activities and virtual asset service providers. The UAE legislation portal lists the resolution as active, issued on Dec. 12, 2022, published in Official Gazette No. 741 on Dec. 15, 2022, and effective Jan. 14, 2023. From Jan. 1, 2026, references to the Securities and Commodities Authority should be read in light of Federal Decree-Law No. 32 of 2025, which replaced SCA with the Capital Market Authority while preserving Resolution 111/2022 to the extent it is not inconsistent with the new capital-market legislation.

What Cabinet Resolution 111/2022 covers

The resolution defines virtual assets as digital representations of property value that can be digitally traded, transferred or used for investment purposes, excluding digital representations of paper currencies, securities and other funds. It defines VASPs as legal persons conducting one or more virtual-asset activities for or on behalf of another person, including platform operators, brokers and custodians.

The federal perimeter applies to the UAE virtual-asset sector, virtual-asset activities and VASPs, including free zones. It excludes regulation of virtual assets inside financial free zones, digital securities and digital commodity contracts governed by SCA-specific rules, and payment-purpose virtual assets or stored-value facilities under the Central Bank of the UAE, except where the Central Bank approves them for listing and trading for investment purposes on a virtual-asset platform.

Licensing perimeter for VASPs

Article 4 establishes the approval and licensing baseline: a person may not engage in virtual-asset activities in the UAE without approval and a licence from the SCA or a local licensing authority, as applicable. It also requires a person wishing to conduct virtual-asset activities to have the UAE as its domicile for those activities and to use a legal form approved by the local commercial-licensing authorities.

Article 5 identifies core licensable activities: operating and managing virtual-asset platforms; exchange services between one or more forms of virtual assets; transfer services; brokerage services for trading virtual assets; and custody and management services enabling control over virtual assets. The Cabinet may amend the activity list based on an SCA proposal coordinated with local licensing authorities and the Central Bank.

Regulatory powers, safeguards and AML/CFT

The resolution gives the SCA, now read with the Capital Market Authority transition, federal oversight of virtual-asset activities, VASPs and virtual-asset transactions in the UAE including free zones. It authorizes implementing resolutions, licensing mechanisms, data-protection verification, AML/CFT monitoring, investor-risk awareness, and Central Bank coordination for financial and monetary stability.

Minimum licensing checks include sanctions-list screening, absence of relevant criminal investigations or convictions, technology and cybersecurity capacity, investor-data protection, capital, credit guarantee, insurance and compliance-management conditions. Ongoing supervision covers clear and non-misleading risk disclosure, compliance with UAE AML/CFT legislation and FATF requirements, and mechanisms for VASPs to notify the regulator and relevant entities of security risks, breaches or cybercrime-related conduct.

Local authorities, Dubai VARA and implementation

Local licensing authorities must provide VASP, licensing and transaction information to the federal regulator on request, while the federal regulator coordinates with local authorities, the Central Bank and other entities. Cabinet Decision No. 112/2022 separately delegated specified Resolution 111/2022 functions to Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority for Dubai and its free zones; VARA’s rulebook states that VARA regulates Dubai mainland and free zones except the DIFC.

Enforcement and later developments

Article 12 contemplates warnings, suspension of listings or platforms, suspension or revocation of licences, closure assistance, fines up to AED 10 million, profit-or-loss-based fines, and referral to public prosecution. Cabinet Resolution No. 99 of 2024 later issued a detailed violations and administrative penalties table for Resolution 111/2022. Cabinet Resolution No. 83 of 2025 set fees for VASP registration, licensing, renewals and cancellations. Editors should monitor implementing resolutions and any Capital Market Authority updates because the 2025 decree preserves the 2022 virtual-asset resolutions only to the extent they remain consistent with newer legislation.

Key provisions

Federal virtual-asset perimeter

Applies to UAE virtual-asset activities and VASPs, including free zones, while excluding financial free zones and specified payment, securities and commodity instruments.

Regulatory perimeter Jan 14, 2023 Source

Licensing for VASP activities

Requires approval and licensing for covered VA activities and identifies platform operation, exchange, transfer, brokerage, custody and management as licensable activities.

Licensing Jan 14, 2023 Source

Regulator powers and coordination

Authorizes federal oversight, implementing resolutions, data-protection verification, AML/CFT measures, investor awareness and Central Bank coordination.

Oversight Jan 14, 2023 Source

Minimum VASP safeguards

Sets checks for sanctions exposure, technology resilience, data protection, capital, insurance, compliance systems, risk disclosure, AML/CFT and breach notices.

AML/CFT Jan 14, 2023 Source

Local licensing authority oversight

Requires local licensing authorities to provide VASP, licence and transaction information to the federal regulator and coordinate with CBUAE and other entities.

Coordination Jan 14, 2023 Source

Enforcement and penalties

Provides for warnings, suspensions, revocation, platform suspension, fines up to AED 10 million, profit-based fines and public-prosecution referrals.

Enforcement Jan 14, 2023 Source

Timeline

  1. Cabinet resolution issued

    Resolution issued by the Cabinet after proposal by the SCA chair and Cabinet approval.

    Enacted Source
  2. Published in Official Gazette

    Published in Official Gazette No. 741; entry into force set 30 days after publication.

    Enacted Source
  3. Entered into force

    UAE legislation portal lists Jan. 14, 2023 as the effective date.

    In force Source
  4. Penalty schedule issued

    Cabinet Resolution 99/2024 issued administrative penalties for violations of Resolution 111/2022; effective Oct. 16, 2024.

    Enacted Source
  5. VASP fee resolution issued

    Cabinet Resolution 83/2025 set VASP registration, licensing, renewal and cancellation fees.

    Enacted Source
  6. Capital Market Authority transition

    Federal Decree-Law 32/2025 replaced SCA with the Capital Market Authority and preserved Resolution 111/2022 where consistent.

    In force Source

Who it affects

Actors

Capital Market Authority, Central Bank of the UAE, Dubai Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority, Securities and Commodities Authority, UAE Cabinet

Asset classes

Virtual assets

Official sources

Editorial note

Official English text is a translation; the UAE legislation portal states that the Arabic text prevails in case of conflict. Verify operative obligations against the Arabic original and subsequent implementing resolutions. This profile is not legal advice.