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This Japan Payment Services Act 2026 guide addresses the sweeping Payment Services Act amendments that take operational effect on 13 June 2026, reshaping how crypto-asset exchanges, stablecoin issuers and custodial wallet providers must register, report and protect users in Japan. The amendments expand VASP registration requirements, introduce a formal classification framework for stablecoins as “electronic payment instruments,” tighten travel-rule notification obligations for cross-border transactions, and clarify the FSA’s enforcement posture toward foreign platforms that solicit Japanese users. For compliance officers, in-house counsel and fintech founders operating in or targeting the Japanese market, the window for preparation is now measured in weeks rather than months.
What to do this quarter, five priority actions:
Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA) has pursued an iterative approach to crypto-asset regulation since amending the Payment Services Act (Act No. 59 of 2009) in 2017 to bring crypto-asset exchange service providers (CESPs) within its supervisory perimeter. The 2023 amendments introduced the “electronic payment instruments” category to address stablecoins. The 2025–2026 amendment cycle, enacted on 6 June 2025 and set for full implementation on 13 June 2026, goes significantly further.
The key changes fall into four categories. First, the scope of entities that must register as crypto-asset exchange service providers or intermediary businesses has been broadened. Second, the regulatory treatment of stablecoins, including reserve, custody and redemption requirements, has been codified in detailed Cabinet orders and FSA ordinances. Third, notification obligations under the travel rule have been strengthened, with Japan designating additional jurisdictions whose regulatory frameworks are deemed equivalent. Fourth, the FSA has signalled a more assertive enforcement posture toward foreign platforms that target Japanese users without registration, as demonstrated by recent warnings and operational pauses by unregistered offshore exchanges.
Industry stakeholders submitted comments during the public consultation on draft Cabinet orders and related ordinances in early 2026, and the FSA’s May 2026 publication on partial amendments to the designation of equivalent-regulation countries reflects the latest iteration of these rules.
Compliance planning requires precise awareness of the legislative timeline. The table below consolidates the key milestones from enactment through full operational effect.
| Date | Event | Required Action |
|---|---|---|
| 6 June 2025 | Act to Amend the Payment Services Act enacted | Begin internal gap analysis; identify new registration triggers |
| Q4 2025 | FSA publishes draft Cabinet orders and related ordinances for public consultation | Submit industry comments; review draft ordinances for operational detail |
| February 2026 | Public consultation period closes; FSA reviews submissions | Monitor FSA responses; update compliance roadmap |
| May 2026 | FSA publishes partial amendment to equivalent-country designation (travel rule) | Confirm counterparty jurisdiction equivalence for travel-rule compliance |
| 13 June 2026 | Full operational effect of amended PSA | All registrations, AML programs, stablecoin reserves and reporting systems must be in place |
Practical action: Work backwards from 13 June 2026. If your entity has not yet commenced the registration process or the amendment of an existing registration, the remaining window is critically short, typical FSA review periods can extend several months.
The amended Payment Services Act expands the perimeter of entities requiring registration with the FSA. Under Article 2 of the Payment Services Act, crypto-asset exchange services encompass the purchase, sale, exchange and intermediation of crypto-assets, as well as the management of users’ crypto-assets. The 2025–2026 amendments add the category of “crypto-asset intermediary business,” which brings within the registration perimeter entities that intermediate transactions on behalf of registered CESPs without themselves holding user assets.
| Entity Type | Registration Required? | Primary Obligations |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic crypto exchange (orderbook) | Yes | VASP registration; AML/CFT program; user asset segregation; reserve proof for listed stablecoins; reporting to FSA |
| Custodial wallet provider | Yes (if custody qualifies as intermediary/exchange service) | Registration; custody controls; periodic audits; incident reporting |
| Crypto-asset intermediary business | Yes (lighter-touch registration) | Registration as intermediary; compliance program; user protection measures; reporting |
| Foreign exchange serving Japanese users | Likely (depends on targeting/solicitation) | Travel rule notifications; potential requirement to register or appoint local representative; geo-blocking recommended until legal opinion obtained |
VASP registration in Japan is a structured, document-intensive process administered by the FSA. The process rewards thorough preparation, incomplete applications face delays measured in months. The following virtual asset service provider guidance reflects the operational expectations that the FSA applies during review.
Under the amended PSA and aligned with FATF standards for VASPs, Japan imposes travel-rule notification obligations on crypto-asset exchange service providers. The FSA’s May 2026 notice updated the list of jurisdictions deemed to have equivalent travel-rule regulations. In practice, this means that for every transaction above the prescribed threshold involving a counterparty in a designated jurisdiction, the originating VASP must transmit originator and beneficiary information to the receiving institution.
Applicants should expect the FSA to probe the following areas during review:
Industry observers expect the following approximate timeline for a well-prepared application:
| Phase | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-application preparation | 2–4 months | Document drafting, AML program development, IT security audit |
| FSA initial review | 3–6 months | FSA may issue multiple rounds of questions; responsiveness is critical |
| Supplementary review / on-site inspection | 1–3 months | FSA may conduct on-site checks of IT systems and compliance controls |
| Registration grant | , | Upon satisfaction of all requirements; no guaranteed timeline |
Practical action: Applicants targeting the 13 June 2026 deadline who have not yet filed should engage local counsel immediately and consider whether the lighter-touch intermediary business registration may provide a faster path to market.
Stablecoin regulation in Japan was fundamentally reshaped by the 2023 amendments to the Payment Services Act, which created the “electronic payment instruments” (EPI) category. The 2025–2026 amendments build on this foundation by specifying reserve, custody and redemption obligations in greater operational detail through Cabinet orders and FSA ordinances.
Under the amended PSA, only certain categories of licensed financial institution may issue EPIs that function as stablecoins redeemable at par for fiat currency. As noted in the Chambers Fintech 2026 practice guide for Japan, yen-pegged and dollar-pegged stablecoins can only be sold to Japanese residents if issued by a bank, trust company or licensed fund transfer service provider. Issuers must:
Registered crypto-asset exchanges that wish to list stablecoins classified as EPIs must verify issuer compliance and maintain their own custody controls. The likely practical effect of the 2026 amendments will be to create a two-tier market: compliant EPIs issued by licensed entities that can be freely traded on registered exchanges, and non-compliant tokens that face delisting pressure and enforcement risk.
Custodial arrangements for EPIs may involve trust structures, bank deposit arrangements or dedicated custody accounts with licensed institutions. Exchanges listing EPIs should document:
Whether foreign crypto platforms can lawfully serve Japanese users is among the most consequential questions arising from the Japan Payment Services Act 2026 guide. The amended PSA does not contain a blanket prohibition on cross-border access, but the FSA has adopted an increasingly assertive posture toward unregistered foreign platforms that actively target Japanese users.
The FSA’s enforcement approach centres on a “targeting” analysis: does the foreign platform solicit, market to or actively onboard Japanese residents? Indicators include Japanese-language interfaces, yen-denominated trading pairs, advertising in Japanese media and onboarding flows that accept Japanese identification documents. In late 2025, at least one major offshore exchange paused services to Japanese users after receiving regulatory warnings, a development that underscored the FSA’s willingness to act against cross-border crypto payments to Japan from unregistered operators.
Japan’s regulatory framework for crypto-assets does not exist in isolation. The Financial Instruments and Exchange Act (FIEA) governs securities, and tokens that function as investment contracts or profit-sharing instruments may fall under FIEA rather than, or in addition to, the PSA. In April 2026, Japan’s cabinet approved a draft amendment that would classify certain crypto-assets as financial products under the FIEA, further expanding the overlap between the two regimes.
Practical action: Before issuing or listing any token, conduct a classification analysis with qualified counsel. Misclassification can result in enforcement action under both the PSA and the FIEA simultaneously.
The following checklist consolidates the immediate compliance actions required ahead of the 13 June 2026 implementation date. Each item should be assigned to a responsible officer with a clear deadline.
Note on penalties: Non-compliance with the amended PSA can result in administrative monetary penalties, business suspension orders, injunctions and, in cases involving serious AML failures, criminal sanctions. The FSA has demonstrated its willingness to take public enforcement action, including publishing the names of non-compliant entities.
The following resources provide direct access to the primary regulatory materials referenced throughout this Japan Payment Services Act 2026 guide:
Regulator contact: The FSA’s Supervisory Bureau handles registration applications and enquiries for crypto-asset service providers. Formal correspondence should be directed through the FSA’s prescribed channels, and applicants are strongly advised to engage through local legal counsel.
The amended Payment Services Act represents the most significant overhaul of Japan’s crypto-asset regulatory framework since the original 2017 amendments. With the 13 June 2026 operational deadline now imminent, compliance is not a strategic option, it is an operational necessity. Entities that have not yet commenced the registration process, updated their AML/CFT programs or classified their stablecoin exposure face real enforcement risk.
This Japan Payment Services Act 2026 guide has outlined the key legislative changes, registration pathways, stablecoin obligations and cross-border compliance considerations that VASPs, exchanges and fintech operators must address. Early indications suggest that the FSA will maintain its assertive supervisory approach, making proactive engagement with the regulator and thorough preparation essential for any business seeking to operate lawfully in one of Asia’s most important digital-asset markets. Qualified legal counsel with direct regulatory experience remains the most effective investment a compliance team can make in the weeks ahead.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Takeshi Nagase at Anderson Mori & Tomotsune, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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