Our Expert in Liechtenstein
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Deciding when to hire a Payments & Digital Assets lawyer in Liechtenstein is now the single most consequential timing call a fintech founder or compliance lead will make in 2026. The principality sits at the intersection of three regulatory frameworks, the Token and Trustworthy Technologies Act (TVTG), the EU Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA, Regulation (EU) 2023/1114), and the traditional payment-services regime administered by the Finanzmarktaufsicht (FMA), each with its own capital thresholds, documentation burdens and passporting mechanics. This guide maps the concrete choice between an e-money institution (EMI) licence and a payment institution (PI) licence, identifies the 2026 deadlines that compress timelines, and specifies the five situations in which engaging Liechtenstein counsel is no longer optional.
Liechtenstein is an EEA member state. Crypto assets are legal, and the country enacted one of the world’s first comprehensive blockchain statutes, the TVTG, which entered into force on 1 January 2020. The FMA supervises both traditional payment institutions and TT service providers registered under the TVTG. Because Liechtenstein transposes EU financial-services directives through the EEA Agreement, an EMI or PI licensed here can passport services across the entire European Economic Area. With MiCA now fully applicable and ESMA’s secondary technical standards maturing throughout 2026, the window between regulatory readiness and market entry is narrowing fast.
An e-money institution is authorised to issue electronic money: stored monetary value represented by a claim on the issuer, issued on receipt of funds, and accepted by third parties for payment. The EMI licence is the vehicle behind most digital wallets, stored-value products, prepaid card programmes and neobank cores operating in the EEA. In Liechtenstein, EMIs are supervised by the Banking Supervision Section of the FMA.
Applicants must establish a legal entity in Liechtenstein with adequate governance, fit-and-proper directors, and a registered office in the principality. The minimum initial capital requirement for an EMI under the transposed E-Money Directive (EMD2) is EUR 350,000. Ongoing own-funds requirements are calculated as a percentage of average outstanding e-money. The FMA expects locally anchored governance, at least one director resident in Liechtenstein and demonstrable AML/KYC infrastructure before the application is filed.
A complete EMI application typically includes a business plan, programme of operations, internal governance policies, AML/CTF framework, IT-security documentation and proof of initial capital. Industry observers expect the FMA review process to take between six and twelve months from a complete filing, depending on the complexity of the applicant’s cross-border plans and technology stack.
A payment institution is authorised to provide payment services, executing payment transactions, operating payment accounts used exclusively for payments, and offering payment initiation or account information services. A PI does not issue electronic money. It moves funds rather than storing them as a digital claim.
The minimum initial capital for a PI depends on the services offered. Under the transposed Payment Services Directive (PSD2), thresholds range from EUR 20,000 (for payment initiation only) to EUR 125,000 (for full payment-service provision including operating payment accounts). This significantly lower capital bar makes the PI route attractive for early-stage fintechs that do not need to issue stored value.
PI applications follow a similar documentary structure to EMI applications but are generally processed faster, industry observers expect four to eight months for a straightforward filing. The FMA commonly queries the applicant’s safeguarding arrangements, outsourcing dependencies and the adequacy of the AML officer function. Cross-border passporting intentions should be disclosed upfront because they affect the scope of the FMA’s supervisory assessment.
Choose an EMI when your product requires issuing and storing customer funds as electronic money. Choose a PI when you only need to execute, initiate or facilitate payments without holding stored value.
| Dimension | EMI | PI |
|---|---|---|
| Core permission | Issue & redeem e-money + all payment services | Payment services only; no e-money issuance |
| Minimum initial capital | EUR 350,000 | EUR 20,000–125,000 (depending on service scope) |
| Safeguarding of client funds | Mandatory ring-fencing or insurance of all outstanding e-money | Safeguarding required for funds received for payment execution |
| Typical use cases | Digital wallets, prepaid cards, neobank cores, stored-value products | Payment processing, PSP, payment initiation, account information |
| AML/KYC burden | Full CDD, ongoing monitoring, SAR filing; higher scrutiny due to stored funds | Full CDD, ongoing monitoring, SAR filing; proportionate to transaction risk |
| EEA passporting | Yes, notification to FMA, then host-state access | Yes, same notification mechanism |
| Estimated time to licence | 6–12 months | 4–8 months |
| Ongoing compliance cost | Higher, audit, own-funds calculation on outstanding e-money, FMA fees | Lower, proportional to payment volume |
| Insolvency / enforceability | E-money holders have direct claim; safeguarded funds segregated from estate | Client funds safeguarded but claims structured differently |
| Dispute resolution | Liechtenstein courts; FMA complaints mechanism; arbitration if contractually agreed | Same |
Liechtenstein levies a flat corporate income tax (Ertragssteuer) of 12.5 % on net profits. There is no withholding tax on dividends paid to non-resident shareholders and no capital gains tax at the corporate level on the disposal of qualifying participations. Because Liechtenstein is not an EU member state but applies VAT under a customs-union treaty with Switzerland, the Swiss VAT framework applies, the standard rate is currently 8.1 %. Financial services, including most payment and e-money services, are generally VAT-exempt, but the boundaries of exemption require careful analysis when a product blends financial and non-financial elements.
| Item | EMI | PI |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate income tax | 12.5 % | 12.5 % |
| VAT on core services | Generally exempt (Swiss VAT rules) | Generally exempt (Swiss VAT rules) |
| Minimum initial capital | EUR 350,000 | EUR 20,000–125,000 |
| Withholding tax on dividends | 4 % coupon tax on domestic-source bearer instruments (narrow scope); otherwise none | Same |
A Payments & Digital Assets lawyer in Liechtenstein adds value here by stress-testing the VAT classification of hybrid products and structuring holding arrangements that exploit the participation exemption.
Beyond initial capital, applicants should budget for legal fees, the FMA application fee, compliance-system build-out, and ongoing supervisory levies. The FMA charges application and ongoing supervision fees that vary by licence type and firm size, exact schedules are published in the FMA’s fee ordinance and should be confirmed directly with the authority before budgeting. Legal advisory costs for a full EMI application (including AML framework, governance documentation and FMA liaison) typically run higher than for a PI because of the additional safeguarding and e-money-specific documentation requirements.
Timing is where the EMI-versus-PI decision intersects most directly with the question of when to hire counsel. An EMI application that is filed without locally anchored governance documentation will be returned for supplementation, costing months. A PI filing that omits passporting intentions forces re-engagement with the FMA later. Under MiCA, passporting via Liechtenstein into the EEA requires that the home-state regulator (the FMA) has completed its assessment and issued the authorisation before the notification procedure to host-state authorities can begin. Any delay in the licence stage compresses the passporting window.
Directors of both EMIs and PIs bear personal liability for regulatory compliance failures, including AML breaches. The FMA expects at least one director to be resident in Liechtenstein, and the board must demonstrate collective competence in payments, risk management and compliance. For EMIs, the obligation to safeguard outstanding e-money creates an additional layer of fiduciary responsibility. Research by the Universität Liechtenstein on the custody of crypto assets highlights that the enforceability of client claims over tokenised and digital assets remains an evolving area, making robust legal structuring at the governance level critical.
Liechtenstein courts apply civil-law principles and are familiar with financial-services disputes. Arbitration is available if agreed contractually. Under the TVTG, the legal framework for the representation of rights on trustworthy technologies provides a statutory basis for the enforceability of tokenised claims, a feature that distinguishes Liechtenstein from jurisdictions without dedicated blockchain legislation. Both EMI and PI licence holders are subject to the FMA’s complaints-handling mechanism, and customers can escalate unresolved disputes through the FMA or the courts.
Both licence types require ongoing compliance with AML/CTF obligations under Liechtenstein’s Due Diligence Act (SPG), annual audits by an FMA-approved auditor, regular regulatory reporting, and adherence to outsourcing and IT-security standards. The EMI carries a heavier ongoing burden because of the requirement to calculate own funds against outstanding e-money and to demonstrate safeguarding adequacy on an ongoing basis. For firms that also operate as TT service providers under the TVTG, the regulatory burden is additive, a dual registration and compliance framework that strongly favours early legal engagement.
2026 marks the first full year in which the MiCA framework, Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, formally adopted by the Council of the EU in May 2023, is fully operational across the EEA. For Liechtenstein-based firms, the practical effects are threefold.
The likely practical effect of these changes is that any firm planning to offer payment or digital-asset services from Liechtenstein into the EEA in 2026 must engage a MiCAR 2026 lawyer before filing, not after.
Choose an EMI licence when:
Choose a PI licence when:
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Issuing digital wallets or stored-value products | EMI |
| Fastest time to market with lowest capital | PI |
| Float revenue from customer balances | EMI |
| Payment processing or initiation only | PI |
| Single licence covering payments + e-money | EMI |
| Adding TVTG/CASP registration alongside payment services | Either, but engage counsel for dual-framework mapping |
| Passporting via Liechtenstein into the full EEA | Either, both passport; EMI offers broader product scope |
Not every stage of building a fintech requires external counsel. But five specific situations make hiring a Liechtenstein-based payments lawyer non-negotiable rather than merely prudent.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Josef Bergt at Bergt Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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