The document does not introduce an entirely new legal framework but interprets the existing Virtual Asset Issuance Rulebook, giving market participants the operational clarity that has been largely absent across competing financial hubs.
The highest-regulation category covers fiat-referenced virtual assets and asset-referenced tokens, which in practice means stablecoins and tokenized real-world assets. Issuers operating in this category must obtain a full Category 1 VA Issuance License and maintain minimum paid-up capital of either AED 1.5 million or 2% of average reserve assets, whichever is higher. On top of that, issuers of asset-referenced tokens are required to hold net liquid assets equivalent to at least 1.2 times their monthly operating expenses, held in cash or stable virtual assets. The second category is intermediary-led, meaning virtual assets must be distributed exclusively through a VARA-licensed broker-dealer or exchange. A third exempt category applies to tokens with limited functionality or restricted use cases, which face fewer compliance obligations.
The timing matters. The UAE received approximately $56 billion in crypto inflows between 2024 and 2025. Chainalysis data confirmed that UAE crypto inflows grew by 33% in the 2024-2025 period, following an 86.4% surge the year before.
Dubai alone accounts for roughly 50% of total UAE cryptocurrency market activity. Against that backdrop, the absence of structured issuance rules had been a visible gap, and one that competitors in Singapore and Hong Kong had not yet filled either. VARA General Counsel Ruben Bombardi described the framework as providing a “targeted regulatory path” and increased transparency for all market participants.
The guidance also introduces concrete operational requirements that go beyond capital thresholds. All versions of whitepapers and risk disclosure statements must be retained for at least eight years after a token ceases circulation. To qualify as a “Qualified Investor” in Dubai, individuals must demonstrate net assets of AED 3.5 million excluding their primary residence, or an annual income of at least AED 700,000. The formal legal separation of real-world asset tokens from security tokens is notable because it creates a distinct compliance lane for tokenized property, commodities, and infrastructure, rather than forcing issuers into securities frameworks designed for traditional markets.
The token issuance guidance is not the only significant regulatory move from Dubai in recent months. On March 31, VARA published a formal rulebook for crypto exchange-traded derivatives, permitting futures, options, contracts for difference, and perpetual instruments under license. Retail investors in this segment face a 5-to-1 leverage cap and a mandatory 20% initial margin. Exchanges are explicitly prohibited from proprietary trading on their own platforms, a rule designed to prevent the conflicts of interest that contributed to several high-profile collapses in the sector.
At the federal level, a new UAE law effective from February 13, 2026 introduced eight licensed VASP categories and imposed a complete ban on privacy tokens across the entire country. Protocols such as Monero and Zcash, along with anonymizing devices, are no longer permitted. The Central Bank of the UAE has also set a compliance deadline for decentralized finance projects by September 2026, with non-compliance penalties reaching up to AED 1 billion. Under a separate cooperation agreement, VASPs licensed by VARA in Dubai are now automatically registered with the federal Securities and Commodities Authority, removing the need for a separate application to operate across the UAE.
Beyond financial markets, Dubai is integrating digital assets into core parts of its economy. The Dubai Land Department is advancing a framework that allows fractional ownership of property through blockchain, and developers are required to synchronize project timelines with the Dubai REST app so investors can track construction progress in real time.
The Dubai Multi Commodities Centre has partnered with Crypto.com to extend tokenization to global commodities including precious metals and energy, targeting a reduction in settlement friction across international trade.
Dubai currently ranks fifth globally in the 2025 World Crypto Rankings, behind Singapore, the United States, Lithuania, and Switzerland, but holds a perfect score for tax-friendliness given that crypto gains attract no personal income or capital gains tax.
In 2025, the UAE attracted an estimated 9,800 high-net-worth individuals, the highest net inflow of any country globally, bringing approximately $63 billion in private wealth. The emirate’s broader digital economy targets aim to double the sector’s contribution to GDP to 19.4% by 2030, with a separate goal of generating $27 billion annually from digital activity by 2033.
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