---
title: "Switzerland's FINMA DLT Act: The Original DLT Trading Facility Licence and What It Buys"
slug: switzerland-finma-dlt-licence
publishedAt: 2026-05-25T20:30:00Z
author: Finconduit Editorial Team
tags: DLT Act, FinIA, FinSA, AMLA
canonicalUrl: https://finconduit.com/resources/switzerland-finma-dlt-licence
---
# Switzerland's FINMA DLT Act: The Original DLT Trading Facility Licence and What It Buys

Switzerland built a bespoke DLT Trading Facility regime three years before MiCA. Here is when the licence — and the Swiss stack — actually pays off.

In **September 2020**, three years before the **EU** finalised **MiCA**, Switzerland did something quietly radical: it amended ten federal acts in a single omnibus statute to create a new category of financial\-market infrastructure — the **DLT Trading Facility**. The result is a licence that is **rarer than any MiCA CASP authorisation**, harder to obtain, and confers things MiCA simply does not.

That difference matters. A **FINMA**\-supervised DLT venue is a **settlement venue**, a **trading venue**, and an **uncertificated\-securities register** all at once — combined into one licence with one supervisor. No EU CASP can say that. And in Switzerland, the regulator\-banking\-custody triangle is unusually short: most of the country's crypto\-friendly banks sit within an hour's train ride of FINMA's Berne offices.

But the licence is not for everyone. It costs more, takes longer, gives you **no EU passport**, and demands real Swiss substance. This guide explains the **Swiss DLT Stack** — DLT Trading Facility licence \+ **FinIA** portfolio\-manager licence \+ **AMLA** SRO membership — and shows when the trade is worth it.

## Why Switzerland Built a DLT\-Specific Licence Three Years Before MiCA

The [**DLT Act**](https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/2021/33/de)¹[^1] — formally the Federal Act on the Adaptation of Federal Law to Developments in Distributed Ledger Technology — was not a single piece of legislation. It was a surgical amendment to ten existing federal acts: the **Code of Obligations**, **FinIA**, **FinSA**, **AMLA**, the **Banking Act**, the **Financial Market Infrastructure Act \(FMIA\)**, and four others.

Switzerland's regulatory philosophy is **technology\-neutral** but **activity\-specific**. Rather than draft a single "crypto law," the Federal Council slotted DLT into the existing financial\-market framework wherever it created a real gap. The two largest gaps were **property law** — could a token actually represent a registered security? — and **infrastructure law** — could a multilateral trading system also settle? The DLT Act answered both with a yes.

That is why Swiss\-regulated tokenised securities operate at a structural level that no MiCA jurisdiction can yet match: the token is the security; the venue is the register; the venue is also the settlement system. The legal plumbing is unified.

## The Three\-Layer Swiss DLT Stack — Overview

A fully\-regulated Swiss crypto venue is almost never one licence. It is a **stack** — three coordinated authorisations that together cover trading, custody, settlement, advisory, and the AML perimeter.

- **Layer 1 — DLT Trading Facility licence**. A new category of financial\-market infrastructure under FMIA. Combines a multilateral trading system and a central settlement system in one.

- **Layer 2 — FinIA licence**. Portfolio\-manager, trustee, or securities\-firm authorisation under the Financial Institutions Act for any advisory, asset\-management, or proprietary\-trading activity.

- **Layer 3 — AMLA SRO membership**. The Swiss anti\-money\-laundering perimeter: every on\-ramp/off\-ramp activity sits inside a self\-regulatory organisation under FINMA oversight.

> **Tip:** The single most common scoping error: applicants assume a DLT Trading Facility licence is a 'super\-CASP' and forget that any advisory or portfolio\-management arm needs a separate FinIA authorisation, and every fiat on\-ramp needs SRO cover. Plan the stack — not the licence — from day one.

## Layer 1: DLT Trading Facility Licence \(settlement \+ trading combined\)

The [**DLT Trading Facility licence**](https://www.finma.ch/en/authorisation/financial-market-infrastructures/dlt-trading-facilities/)²[^2] is regulated under Articles 73a–73f of the **Financial Market Infrastructure Act \(FMIA\)**. It authorises a single entity to \(a\) operate a multilateral trading system for DLT securities, \(b\) hold and administer those securities in custody, \(c\) clear, and \(d\) settle them — all under one roof. In traditional finance, that is the combined role of an exchange, a central securities depositary, and a settlement agent.

Minimum capital is **CHF 1 million** for the lighter "small DLT trading facility" variant \(an SME\-friendly cap that applies when trading volume and customer assets stay below the FMIA thresholds\), and **CHF 5 million** for the full licence with retail\-customer access. Every applicant must also hold **sufficient capital to cover operational risk** — in practice FINMA negotiates this individually based on transaction volumes and counterparty exposure.

What you can do under the licence:

- Admit **retail participants directly** — a structural difference from traditional Swiss MTFs, which are institutional\-only.

- List **DLT securities** \(uncertificated register tokens / ledger\-based securities\) — including tokenised equity, debt, and structured products.

- Provide **central custody** with segregation that is bankruptcy\-remote under Swiss law.

- Operate **on\-chain atomic settlement** — the legal moment of settlement is the on\-chain confirmation, not a downstream CSD record.

## Layer 2: FinIA Portfolio\-Manager or Securities\-Firm Licence

The [**FinIA**](https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/2018/801/en)³[^3] sits underneath the DLT licence whenever the venue runs **discretionary or advisory activity** alongside pure market\-infrastructure operations. Four tiers matter:

- **Portfolio Manager** — minimum capital **CHF 100,000**; supervised by a supervisory organisation that reports to FINMA.

- **Trustee** — same threshold; for managing trust structures including foundations holding tokenised assets.

- **Manager of Collective Assets** — minimum **CHF 200,000**; required if you manage a Swiss collective investment scheme or comparable foreign vehicle.

- **Securities Firm** — minimum **CHF 1.5 million**; for proprietary trading, market\-making, or underwriting of securities \(including DLT securities\).

FinIA's conduct\-of\-business twin is [**FinSA**](https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/2018/802/en)⁴[^4] — the Swiss equivalent of MiFID II's investor\-protection regime. Client classification \(retail / professional / institutional\), suitability, appropriateness, and the **basic information sheet** all flow from FinSA.

## Layer 3: AMLA SRO Membership

The [**AMLA**](https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/1998/892/en)⁵[^5] applies whenever a Swiss\-licensed entity accepts customer fiat, exchanges crypto for crypto on behalf of customers, or operates as a financial intermediary. Compliance happens through one of two routes:

- **Direct FINMA supervision** — automatic for banks, securities firms, fund managers, and DLT trading facilities.

- **SRO membership** — for portfolio managers, trustees, and stand\-alone financial intermediaries who are not directly FINMA\-supervised. The SRO conducts inspections, sets binding rules, and reports breaches to FINMA. **VQF** \(the largest crypto\-aware SRO\), **PolyReg**, and **SO\-FIT** are the most\-used options. Travel Rule compliance, sanctions screening, and STR \(suspicious transaction reporting\) to **MROS** all sit here.

## Swiss DLT Trading Facility vs CASP Class 3 — A Side\-by\-Side


*Table: Swiss DLT Trading Facility licence \(FMIA Art. 73a\-f\) vs MiCA CASP Class 3 \(Annex IV\) — material differences.*

| Dimension | Swiss DLT Trading Facility | MiCA CASP Class 3 |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Supervisor | FINMA directly | Single home\-state NCA \(e.g. CySEC, MFSA, BaFin\) |
| Minimum capital | CHF 1M \(small\) / CHF 5M \(full\) | €150,000 |
| Scope | Trading \+ custody \+ clearing \+ settlement in one | Exchange / custody / order execution — separate activity heads |
| Asset universe | DLT securities \(ledger\-based securities under CO Art. 973d\) | Crypto\-assets \(ARTs, EMTs, other\) — securities tokens excluded |
| Retail access | Permitted directly on venue | Permitted with FinSA\-equivalent disclosures |
| Settlement | On\-chain atomic; venue is the CSD | Off\-chain bookkeeping; CSD layer separate |
| EU passporting | None — Switzerland is non\-EU/non\-EEA | Full single\-market passport across 30 EEA states |
| Timeline to licence | 12\-18 months including pre\-filing dialogue | 6\-12 months in fast NCAs \(Lithuania, Malta\) |
| Substance demand | Senior management \+ risk \+ compliance \+ IT all locally | Variable by NCA — Lithuania/Malta thinner, BaFin/AMF heavier |

## The Uncertificated Register Token — and Why It Matters for Tokenised Securities

The single most underrated provision of the DLT Act sits in the **Swiss Code of Obligations**. A new Article 973d introduced the **Uncertificated Register Token \(URT\)** — also called a **Ledger\-Based Security**. This is the legal vehicle that lets a token ***be*** the security, not merely represent it.

Three conditions create a URT under Swiss law: \(1\) the parties agree the right is registered in a ledger; \(2\) the ledger meets the integrity, transparency, and access requirements of Art. 973d; and \(3\) the holder can dispose of the right **directly through the ledger**. The practical result is that a Swiss tokenised bond, share, or fund interest enjoys the same legal certainty as a paper\-certificated security — but transfers, pledges, and inheritance all happen on\-chain.

No MiCA jurisdiction has this. **MiCA explicitly excludes tokenised securities** — they remain under MiFID II / Prospectus Regulation. So for any business model centred on **tokenised debt, equity, or structured products**, the Swiss legal basis is strictly stronger than anything available in the EU today.

## FINMA's Substance Test in Practice

Switzerland does not run a registration regime. Every DLT licence application is an **individualised authorisation** with one supervisor. That means substance is non\-negotiable. FINMA looks for:

- **Senior management resident in Switzerland** — CEO and at least one executive board member.

- **Local board of directors** with a majority of independent members, at least one of whom is Swiss\-resident.

- **Internal control functions** — risk, compliance, internal audit, all with named, FINMA\-vetted heads.

- **IT and cyber resilience** — FINMA Circular 2023/1 on operational risks and BCP is applied, with DLT\-specific overlays for wallet management, key custody, and smart\-contract change control.

- **Group structure transparency** — full UBO disclosure to the 25% threshold and beyond if FINMA determines control.

## Capital, Timeline, and the Pre\-Filing Dialogue

Switzerland's hallmark — and what separates it from the EEA application experience — is the **pre\-filing dialogue**. Before any formal application is submitted, the applicant meets FINMA repeatedly — sometimes for **6 to 9 months** — to scope the business model, agree the perimeter of the licence, and pre\-clear the substance plan. Most material objections are surfaced and resolved before a single page of the formal file is drafted.

Once the formal application is filed, decisions typically arrive within **6 to 9 months**. Total time from first FINMA contact to operating licence is therefore **12 to 18 months** — slower than Lithuania or Malta on paper, but the pre\-filing process eliminates the back\-and\-forth that characterises MiCA CASP applications in their first year.

> **Warning:** Skipping the pre\-filing dialogue is the single most common mistake. FINMA does not reward speed — it rewards preparation. Applicants who file 'cold' typically face 12 months of supplementary information requests and end up slower than those who took the long route through pre\-filing.

## Switzerland vs Liechtenstein vs Singapore vs Dubai for a Fully\-Regulated Venue


*Table: Switzerland vs Liechtenstein vs Singapore vs Dubai for an institutional crypto venue — practitioner comparison.*

| Dimension | Switzerland | Liechtenstein | Singapore | Dubai \(VARA\) |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Headline regime | DLT Act \+ FinIA \+ AMLA | TVTG \+ Banking Act | Payment Services Act 2019 \(DPT\) | VARA Regulations 2023 |
| Minimum capital | CHF 1M\-5M | CHF 100k\-CHF 1M | S$250k\-S$1M | AED 1.5M\+ |
| Working language | German, French, English | German, English | English | English, Arabic |
| Banking access | Specialised crypto\-friendly Swiss banks | Limited domestic; relies on Swiss correspondents | DBS / OCBC ecosystem | Local \+ GCC \+ Asia |
| Headline tax | Cantonal CIT 11.85%\-21% | 12.5% CIT | 17% CIT \(effective \~10% with incentives\) | 9% federal CIT; 0% free zone qualifying |
| Tokenised securities | Yes — URT under CO 973d | Yes — TVTG token containers | Yes — under SFA | Yes — under VARA \+ SCA |
| EU/EEA passport | No | Yes — full EEA passport via EEA membership | No | No |
| Time to licence | 12\-18 months | 6\-12 months | 9\-18 months | 9\-15 months |
| Best for | Settlement \+ custody \+ tokenised securities | EEA\-passported crypto \+ tokenisation | Asia institutional \+ stablecoins | MENA \+ free\-zone tax \+ speed |

## Tax Overlay — Cantonal CIT, Zug vs Zurich, Holding Company

Swiss corporate income tax is the sum of three layers: federal CIT at **8.5%** \(effectively **7.83%** after deduction\), plus cantonal CIT, plus communal CIT. Aggregate effective rates range from **11.85%** \(Zug, after OECD Pillar Two adjustments\) to roughly **21%** \(parts of Geneva\).

**Zug** remains the canton of choice for crypto\-native operating companies. **Zurich** — at roughly **19.7%** — is preferred where banking\-relationship density matters more than headline rate. **Geneva** is the natural choice for francophone or France\-facing operations. Tax rulings are routinely obtained from cantonal authorities and are binding.

OECD **Pillar Two** applies for groups with consolidated revenue above **€750 million**. Switzerland implemented the Qualified Domestic Minimum Top\-up Tax \(QDMTT\) from 1 January 2024, so the in\-scope group floor is now **15%**. Below threshold, the headline cantonal rates still apply.

## Banking Reality — Small Market, Deep Crypto Proximity

Switzerland is a small banking market — but it is the most crypto\-fluent banking market in Europe. Several FINMA\-licensed banks have explicit DLT charters; several more accept crypto\-business deposits without restriction; and the country hosts the only FINMA\-licensed institutions that combine **banking \+ crypto custody \+ brokerage** under one roof. We do not name them here — the point is the depth of the option set, not specific counterparties.

Three structural realities help applicants:

- **Regulator proximity** — Swiss banks and FINMA share a small ecosystem. A clean FINMA file is a meaningful banking\-onboarding signal.

- **FINMA\-licensed crypto banks** — a category that exists at scale only in Switzerland — can act as both operational bank and custody partner.

- **Cross\-border settlement** — Swiss banks retain **USD, EUR, GBP, and CHF** correspondent capability without the de\-risking pressure that affects smaller EEA jurisdictions.

## The 'No Passporting Into EU' Reality

Switzerland is not in the **EU** or the **EEA**. The bilateral framework with the EU⁶[^6] — managed through the [**Federal Department of Finance**](https://www.efd.admin.ch/efd/en/home/financial-affairs/financial-market-policy/digital-finance.html) — covers many areas of financial services but does ***not*** extend to MiCA. There is no MiCA equivalence regime for Swiss\-licensed CASPs or DLT venues, and none is expected before 2027 at the earliest.

For a Swiss DLT venue, that means three things in practice:

1. **Solicitation of EU customers** requires care. Active marketing into the EU triggers local CASP requirements; reverse solicitation works only narrowly.

1. **Listing tokenised securities** with EU investors typically requires a Prospectus Regulation–compliant document, even when the issuer is Swiss.

1. **EU institutional clients** can access a Swiss DLT venue, but typically through a licensed EU intermediary acting as introducing broker. This is workable for institutional flow; it is structurally awkward for direct retail.

## When Switzerland Wins

Choose Switzerland if any of the following describe the business:

- **Tokenised securities** are core — debt, equity, fund interests, or structured products as URTs.

- **Unified trading \+ settlement** matters — atomic on\-chain settlement gives a real edge for institutional counterparties.

- **Swiss banking ecosystem access** is strategic — for custody depth, multi\-currency, or institutional credibility.

- **Regulator quality** is a feature for your institutional customers — a FINMA charter is uniquely valuable in private banking and asset\-management mandates.

- **The customer base is global or non\-EU** — Asia, Middle East, North America, LatAm. The EU passport gap stops mattering.

Avoid Switzerland — and prefer a MiCA jurisdiction or Liechtenstein — if the priority is **EU retail distribution**, **speed to first revenue**, or a pure **exchange / brokerage** model without tokenised\-security ambition.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### Does Switzerland have a crypto licence?

Switzerland does not have a single "crypto licence." It has activity\-specific authorisations under FINMA: the **DLT Trading Facility licence** for combined trading and settlement of DLT securities; a **FinIA** portfolio\-manager, trustee, or securities\-firm licence for advisory and proprietary trading; the **fintech licence** for deposit\-taking up to CHF 100 million; and AMLA SRO membership for stand\-alone financial intermediaries. Most institutional crypto venues use a combination — the Swiss DLT Stack.

### Is Switzerland in MiCA?

No. Switzerland is not in the EU or the EEA, and **MiCA does not apply** to Swiss\-licensed entities operating from Switzerland. There is also no MiCA equivalence regime today, and none is expected before 2027 at the earliest. Swiss venues serving EU customers must navigate active solicitation rules and Prospectus Regulation requirements for tokenised securities issued to EU investors.

### What's the difference between a DLT Trading Facility licence and a CASP?

Three core differences. First, **asset universe**: a DLT Trading Facility lists DLT securities \(tokenised debt, equity, funds, structured products\) — assets that MiCA explicitly excludes. Second, **infrastructure scope**: Swiss DLT venues are exchange \+ CSD \+ settlement system combined; CASPs are activity\-specific \(custody, exchange, order execution, advice\). Third, **passporting**: a CASP authorisation gives EEA\-wide access; a Swiss DLT licence does not.

### Can Swiss\-licensed firms passport into the EU?

No — neither MiCA equivalence nor MiFID II equivalence currently covers DLT activity. EU customers can access Swiss venues on a reverse\-solicitation basis or through licensed EU intermediaries acting as introducing brokers, but Swiss\-licensed entities cannot actively market crypto\-asset services into the EU. Firms that need EU distribution typically pair a Swiss FINMA entity with a separate MiCA CASP entity in Liechtenstein, Malta, or Cyprus.

### How long does a Swiss DLT Trading Facility licence take?

Plan for **12 to 18 months** from first FINMA contact to operating licence: 6 to 9 months for the pre\-filing dialogue, and a further 6 to 9 months for the formal application review. The pre\-filing process is not optional in practice — it is how Switzerland eliminates the iterative supplementary\-information cycles common in EEA CASP authorisations.

> **Call to action:** Considering Switzerland for a regulated crypto venue? Finconduit produces a DLT\-licence\-vs\-CASP scoping memo with timeline, capital, SRO route options, and Swiss\-banking access. Free first call.

## Related Guides

- [MiCA Compliance Guide for CASPs](/resources/mica-compliance-guide-casps) — the EU comparator: capital, activity heads, and authorisation timeline under MiCA.

- [Liechtenstein TVTG: The EEA's Hidden Crypto Passport](/resources/liechtenstein-tvtg-crypto-licence) — the sister regime: Liechtenstein's token\-container model with full EEA passporting.

- [EEA/UK/Offshore Crypto Incorporation](/resources/eea-uk-offshore-crypto-incorporation) — where to incorporate a regulated crypto entity across the major jurisdictions.

- [Non\-EU VASP Banking Stack](/resources/non-eu-vasp-banking-stack) — the operating\-banking, custody, and FX layer that sits underneath any non\-EU regulated crypto venue.

Switzerland built the DLT Trading Facility licence for a specific reader — one who values a **single supervisor**, a **unified trading\-and\-settlement venue**, and a **legal basis for tokenised securities** that the EU has not yet matched. If your venue is built to serve global institutional capital and to settle tokenised real\-world assets atomically on\-chain, the Swiss DLT Stack is the only regime in Europe that gives you all three. Everything else is a workaround.

- [Tokenized Real\-World Assets and Security Tokens](/resources/tokenized-rwa-security-tokens-mica-mifid) — how tokenized RWAs and security tokens are classified, where the Swiss DLT regime fits the picture.

## Footnotes

[^1]: Bundesgesetz zur Anpassung des Bundesrechts an Entwicklungen der Technik verteilter elektronischer Register \(DLT\-Gesetz\), AS 2021 33, in force from 1 August 2021 / 1 February 2021 \(partial entry\). <https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/2021/33/de>
[^2]: FINMA — DLT Trading Facility licence guide and supervisory practice, FINMA Authorisation portal, accessed 2026. <https://www.finma.ch/en/authorisation/financial-market-infrastructures/dlt-trading-facilities/>
[^3]: Federal Act on Financial Institutions \(FinIA\), Classified Compilation 954.1, in force from 1 January 2020. <https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/2018/801/en>
[^4]: Federal Act on Financial Services \(FinSA\), Classified Compilation 950.1, in force from 1 January 2020. <https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/2018/802/en>
[^5]: Federal Act on Combating Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing \(AMLA\), Classified Compilation 955.0, originally 1997, latest material revision 2023. <https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/1998/892/en>
[^6]: Federal Department of Finance \(EFD\) — Digital Finance policy overview and EU\-Swiss bilateral status, accessed 2026. <https://www.efd.admin.ch/efd/en/home/financial-affairs/financial-market-policy/digital-finance.html>


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Source: https://finconduit.com/resources/switzerland-finma-dlt-licence
