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Any business that wants to offer crypto‑asset exchange services in Japan must complete a formal registration process with the Financial Services Agency (FSA) and the relevant Local Finance Bureau. Understanding how to register a crypto exchange in Japan in 2026 is more important than ever: legislative changes passed this year are raising internal‑control expectations, tightening reporting obligations, and moving certain crypto instruments closer to securities‑grade regulation. This guide walks founders, compliance officers, in‑house counsel, and foreign operators through every stage of the registration procedure, from eligibility checks and document preparation to FSA review, costs, and post‑launch obligations, incorporating the practical effects of the 2026 reforms throughout.
Crypto‑asset regulation in Japan sits primarily under the Payment Services Act (PSA). The FSA maintains a public register of all licensed Crypto‑Asset Exchange Service Providers (CESPs), and any person or entity providing Crypto Asset Exchange Services (CAES) to Japanese residents must appear on that register before commencing operations. The FSA publishes and periodically updates the list of registered providers on its official website.
The registration pathway is a two‑tier process. The applicant first submits its application package to the Local Finance Bureau (Zaimuka / 財務局) in the jurisdiction where the company’s head office is located. That bureau conducts an initial administrative review before forwarding the application, together with its own assessment, to the FSA’s Crypto‑Asset Monitoring Office, which sits under the Deputy Director‑General for Crypto‑Assets, Blockchain and FinTech. The FSA then conducts the substantive review of the applicant’s internal controls, IT security, capital adequacy, and AML/KYC framework.
Registration is mandatory for any entity that buys, sells, or exchanges crypto assets on behalf of users, or that intermediates or manages such transactions. Pure software‑wallet providers with no exchange or custody function may fall outside the registration requirement, though the scope continues to widen. Industry observers expect the 2026 legislative package, which introduces provisions under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act (FIEA) for certain crypto instruments used primarily for investment, to bring additional categories of service providers into a comparable registration framework in the near future.
Before preparing the application, the applicant must satisfy a number of structural and operational prerequisites. Failure to meet any of these at the time of filing will result in the application being returned or delayed.
A foreign company cannot operate a registered crypto exchange in Japan through a cross‑border arrangement alone. The operator must incorporate a local entity (KK or GK), appoint local resident directors, and disclose all ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs) with notarised identification documents and certified translations. The local entity must have its own capitalisation, its own Japanese bank account, and its own compliance team, it cannot simply rely on parent‑company resources abroad. Early engagement with Japan‑qualified legal counsel is essential for structuring the local presence correctly.
The following steps describe the complete registration procedure from pre‑application readiness through to launch and ongoing reporting. The mandatory timeline table below summarises who is responsible for each stage and the typical duration.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Pre‑application readiness (entity formation, capital deposit, appoint compliance officers, draft policies) | Applicant (company), external counsel / accountant | 2–8 weeks |
| 2. Prepare & submit application to Local Finance Bureau | Applicant + counsel | 2–4 weeks |
| 3. Local Finance Bureau administrative review & tax / stamp processing | Local Finance Bureau | 4–12 weeks |
| 4. FSA substantive review, internal controls & IT audit queries | FSA (Crypto‑Asset Monitoring Office) | 8–24 weeks |
| 5. Final registration entry / public listing + certificate issuance | FSA / Local Finance Bureau | 2–4 weeks after final acceptance |
| 6. Pre‑launch compliance testing (AML/KYC systems; penetration / security) | Applicant (internal + auditors) | 2–8 weeks |
| 7. Go‑live & ongoing reporting (CARF, tax, AML) | Applicant (compliance team) | Ongoing (periodic reports) |
Incorporate the Japanese entity (KK or GK), deposit the required paid‑in capital into a local bank account, and obtain a Certificate of Incorporation from the Legal Affairs Bureau. Appoint the designated AML compliance officer and internal‑controls officer. Commission the drafting of the AML/KYC policy manual, the internal control framework, and the IT security and business continuity plan. If an external IT security audit or penetration test is needed, schedule it now so results are available for the application package. Typical duration for this preparation phase is 2–8 weeks, depending on the complexity of the corporate structure and whether an entity already exists.
Compile every document listed in the required documents table below. Complete the official application forms prescribed by the Local Finance Bureau (these vary slightly by region). Pay the registration tax, affix the required revenue stamps, and submit the full package, in hard copy and, where accepted, electronic format, to the Local Finance Bureau in the jurisdiction of the company’s registered head office. This preparation phase typically takes 2–4 weeks once all underlying materials are ready. Ensure every document requiring Japanese translation has been professionally translated and certified.
The Local Finance Bureau conducts a completeness check, verifying that every required document has been submitted, stamps and fees have been paid, and formal requirements are met. During this phase the bureau may issue written queries requesting clarification or supplementary materials, applicants should respond within 14–30 days to avoid delays. Once satisfied, the bureau forwards the application and its assessment to the FSA. This administrative review phase typically takes 4–12 weeks.
The FSA’s Crypto‑Asset Monitoring Office conducts the substantive examination. Reviewers assess the adequacy of the applicant’s internal control framework, AML/KYC policies, IT security architecture, customer‑asset segregation measures, and capital adequacy. Under the 2026 compliance expectations, the FSA applies standards increasingly comparable to those for securities firms, meaning deeper scrutiny of board‑level compliance reporting, segregation of duties, and disclosure practices. The FSA may request on‑site inspections, additional documentation, or revisions to policies. This is the longest phase of the process, typically lasting 8–24 weeks. Complex applications, particularly those involving novel token types or cross‑border custody, may take longer.
Once the FSA is satisfied that all registration requirements under the Payment Services Act are met, it issues a formal registration number and the applicant is added to the public register of licensed crypto‑asset exchange service providers. The Local Finance Bureau issues the registration certificate. This final administrative step typically takes 2–4 weeks after the FSA grants its approval.
Before opening the platform to users, the registered exchange must complete end‑to‑end testing of its AML/KYC onboarding systems, transaction monitoring rules, suspicious‑transaction reporting workflows, and customer communication channels. An external penetration test of the production environment is strongly recommended. This phase runs 2–8 weeks and may overlap with the final stages of the FSA review.
After launch, the registered exchange is subject to ongoing compliance obligations. These include periodic capital‑adequacy and solvency filings with the FSA, suspicious‑transaction reports to the relevant authorities, annual compliance audits, and, from 2026, Cryptoasset Reporting Framework (CARF)‑style reporting that requires the collection and submission of user tax‑residency information and transaction data. Failure to maintain these obligations can result in administrative sanctions, suspension, or revocation of registration.
The table below lists the core documents needed to complete a crypto‑exchange registration application in Japan. Applicants should treat this as a minimum checklist, the Local Finance Bureau or FSA may request additional materials during review.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Certificate of Incorporation (登記簿謄本) | Issued by the Legal Affairs Bureau. Certified copy in Japanese showing company type (KK/GK), registered address, and directors. |
| Certificate of Registered Seal (Inkan Certificate) | Issued by the municipal registry. Stamped and signed copy used for all official filings. |
| Bank statement confirming paid‑in capital | Issued by the local bank. Must evidence the deposited capital amount (typically ¥10,000,000+). |
| Corporate structure & UBO declaration | Applicant‑prepared. Lists all ultimate beneficial owners with addresses, nationalities, and supporting ID. |
| Directors’ CVs, criminal‑record checks & ID copies | Passport, resident card, police clearance (where available). CVs in Japanese (with English translation if needed). |
| AML/KYC Policy & Procedure Manual | Applicant‑prepared. Covers customer due diligence, EDD, transaction monitoring, and STR procedures tailored to Japan requirements. |
| Internal Control Framework & Compliance Manual | Applicant‑prepared. Covers reporting lines, segregation of duties, internal audit plan, and compliance officer appointment letters. |
| IT Security & Business Continuity Plan | Architecture diagrams, cold‑wallet custody policy, disaster‑recovery procedures, and SOC2‑equivalent controls if available. |
| Proof of office (lease agreement) | Japanese‑address lease or ownership documents for the registered office. |
| Financial statements / capital adequacy proof | Audited accounts or internal financials, plus solvency projections. |
| Outsourcer contracts (if any) | Contracts with custody providers, AML screening vendors, KYC vendors, and cloud/hosting providers, with service‑level and security clauses. |
| Sample customer agreement & risk disclosures | Terms of service and risk warnings in Japanese (and English if the platform serves non‑Japanese speakers). Must cover custody, fees, and dispute resolution. |
| IT penetration & security test reports | External auditor reports on vulnerability testing and remediation. May be requested during FSA review. |
| AML training records | Evidence that staff have completed anti‑money‑laundering training, with training materials on file. |
| Official application forms (Local Finance Bureau / FSA) | Prescribed forms, completed and signed. Obtain the current version from the relevant Local Finance Bureau. |
Applicants are advised to prepare a crypto exchange documents checklist with downloadable templates to streamline internal coordination, particularly where multiple offices and external advisors are contributing to the package. Specialists in information technology law can assist with the preparation and certification of technical documentation.
The total elapsed time from the start of pre‑application readiness to operational go‑live is typically 4–9 months for straightforward cases. The 2026 reforms are expected to extend substantive review times, particularly for applicants with complex custody arrangements or cross‑border operations.
Key duration estimates across each stage are as follows:
A critical procedural point: if the FSA or Local Finance Bureau issues a written query, the applicant is generally expected to respond within 14–30 days. Missing this window can result in the application being suspended or returned. Where additional time is needed, applicants should request a formal extension in writing immediately and engage legal counsel to manage the response.
The registration process involves both direct regulatory fees and substantial advisory and infrastructure costs. The table below provides indicative estimates; actual amounts vary by applicant complexity and choice of advisors.
| Item | Amount (Estimate) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Paid‑in capital (typical minimum) | ¥10,000,000+ | Market guidance; confirm adequacy with counsel based on proposed business scale. |
| Registration tax / administrative fees | ¥30,000–¥150,000 | Local registration and revenue‑stamp fees vary by bureau. |
| FSA processing fees | Variable | The FSA may not charge a flat application fee but may require administrative deposits, verify with current FSA guidance. |
| Legal and application advisory fees | ¥1,500,000–¥6,000,000+ | Depends on scope: document preparation, translations, and regulatory liaison. |
| IT security & audit (external) | ¥1,000,000–¥5,000,000+ | Penetration tests, SOC‑type reviews, and custody architecture audits. |
| AML/KYC system licensing & onboarding | ¥500,000–¥4,000,000+ (annual) | Depends on vendor, transaction volume, and screening coverage. |
| Ongoing compliance (annual) | ¥1,000,000–¥4,000,000+ | Internal audit, periodic reporting, and staff training. |
| Tax compliance & CARF reporting costs | Variable | 2026 CARF and domestic tax reforms add reporting burdens; may require system upgrades, estimate separately with tax counsel. |
On the tax side, the Cryptoasset Reporting Framework (CARF) came into force in many jurisdictions from 1 January 2026 and requires registered crypto service providers to collect and report user tax‑residency and transaction data to authorities. Japan’s domestic tax reform also introduces changes for crypto assets, with full implementation projected for future tax years. Applicants should involve a tax adviser and CFO‑level planning from the outset to ensure the exchange’s systems can support tax and reporting implications for registered crypto exchanges in Japan.
Japan’s regulatory landscape for crypto assets is shifting materially in 2026. Three changes carry direct consequences for anyone applying to register a crypto exchange in Japan in 2026:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Noboru Kitayama at Mori Hamada & Matsumoto, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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