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Liechtenstein financial market law 2026 represents the most consequential regulatory shift the principality has experienced in over a decade, driven by a full-scale reorganisation and EEA harmonisation that entered into force on 1 February 2025, followed by the implementation of MiCAR for crypto-asset service providers, revised CRS reporting obligations effective 1 January 2026, and fresh FMA supervisory focus areas that reshape governance expectations across every licence category. This article delivers a practical, step-by-step compliance and licensing checklist for banks, investment firms and crypto-asset providers (CASPs) operating in or passporting through Liechtenstein. Each section maps directly to the regulatory changes, identifies the responsible function within your organisation, and sets out immediate actions you can execute within the next 30 days.
Whether you hold an existing licence, are applying for authorisation, or are evaluating Liechtenstein as a passporting hub into the wider EEA, the checklist below translates regulatory text into operational tasks.
Before reading the full analysis, compliance officers, general counsel and board members should initiate the following three workstreams immediately:
The current compliance landscape is the product of overlapping legislative reforms that unfolded across 2025 and into 2026. Understanding the sequencing is essential because each reform carries its own transitional provisions, and several interact with one another, particularly where MiCAR obligations intersect with the harmonised financial market legislation and updated CRS requirements. The timeline below captures every milestone that compliance teams must account for.
| Date | Change | Immediate Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 1 February 2025 | Full reorganisation and EEA harmonisation of Liechtenstein’s financial market legislation, consolidating sector-specific acts into a coherent, EEA-aligned framework | All regulated entities must map their licences and internal policies to the new legislative structure; legacy references in compliance manuals require updating |
| 2025–2026 (phased) | EEA implementation of MiCAR (Regulation (EU) 2023/1114), the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, with FMA publishing CASP authorisation procedures and guidance | Existing crypto-asset providers under the Token and Trusted Technology Service Provider Act (TVTG) must evaluate whether to transition to a CASP licence or apply for fresh authorisation under MiCAR |
| 1 January 2026 | Revised Common Reporting Standard (CRS) implemented in Liechtenstein in line with the OECD framework update | Banks, asset managers and trustees must capture expanded data fields; system testing and vendor coordination needed before the first reporting deadline |
| 2026 | FMA Guidance 2026/1 issued (covering dissolution and liquidation of funds) alongside publication of the FMA’s supervisory focus areas for 2026 | Fund managers face updated procedural requirements; all supervised entities should review the FMA’s published priorities to anticipate on-site inspections and thematic reviews |
| 2026 (ongoing) | EU Listing Act changes begin affecting EEA passporting of prospectuses and cross-border admission of securities | Issuers and underwriters must update prospectus preparation procedures and confirm liaison protocols with the FMA as home competent authority |
The reorganisation of 1 February 2025, documented in detail by a research project at the Universität Liechtenstein, replaced a patchwork of separate financial market acts with a consolidated statutory framework aligned to EEA directives and regulations. Industry observers expect this structural change to be the foundation for all future Liechtenstein financial market law 2026 developments, as every subsequent FMA guidance and implementing measure now references the harmonised legislation.
For compliance teams, the practical consequence is straightforward: any internal policy, board resolution, or regulatory filing that references the old legislation must be updated. This applies equally to banks governed by banking law provisions, investment firms subject to the harmonised MiFID II-equivalent rules, and CASPs moving from the TVTG framework to MiCAR.
Whether you are seeking a new licence or maintaining an existing authorisation, the harmonised regime now requires a consistent baseline of documentation and governance structures across all entity types. The FMA’s supervisory focus for 2026 has signalled particular attention to the quality of licence applications and the completeness of supporting evidence, making a thorough pre-application review essential for licensing financial intermediaries in Liechtenstein.
The FMA processes licence applications on a case-by-case basis and does not publish fixed statutory deadlines for decisions. However, early indications suggest that well-prepared applications with complete documentation are typically assessed within three to six months. Incomplete filings are the most common cause of delay. The FMA’s CASP authorisation page specifies the precise documentation expected for crypto-asset service providers, including proof of technical controls and fit-and-proper assessments for all qualifying holders and senior management. Post-authorisation, every licensed entity must maintain a regulatory reporting calendar, keep risk registers current, and establish a named supervisory contact within the FMA.
The EEA implementation of MiCAR fundamentally changes the licensing landscape for crypto-asset providers in Liechtenstein. Entities previously authorised under the TVTG now face a decision: transition to a CASP authorisation under MiCAR or apply for a new licence from scratch. The FMA has published dedicated guidance on the authorisation procedure for crypto-asset service providers, setting out the documentation requirements, governance standards and technical controls expected of applicants. For a detailed explanation of what constitutes a CASP under MiCA, see our dedicated explainer.
The FMA’s published requirements for CASP applicants emphasise several areas where applications frequently fall short:
Compliance teams at crypto-asset providers should use the following checklist to prepare their custody and technology documentation:
Once authorised, a Liechtenstein CASP can passport its services across the entire EEA by notifying the FMA, which then communicates with the host-state competent authority. This passporting mechanism, a key advantage of Liechtenstein’s EEA membership, makes the principality a strategically significant base for crypto businesses targeting European markets. For a broader comparison of the CASP licence as the EU crypto compliance standard, see our companion article. Those considering the operational practicalities of launching a crypto exchange will find further step-by-step guidance there.
The revised Common Reporting Standard (CRS) that took effect on 1 January 2026 introduces expanded data fields and tighter due-diligence requirements for all Liechtenstein reporting financial institutions. Banks, asset managers and trustees must now capture and transmit additional information on controlling persons and account holders, and the tolerance for data-quality errors has narrowed. Combined with the FMA’s sustained supervisory focus on AML/CTF effectiveness, reporting compliance requires a structured three-step action plan.
| Entity Type | Key Reporting Obligations (CRS / Tax / Regulatory) | Immediate Steps (Jan–Mar 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Banks | CRS filings; AML suspicious-transaction reporting; FMA prudential returns | Map data fields; run sample submissions; board sign-off of controls |
| Investment firms / asset managers | CRS (beneficial-owner reporting via trustees); periodic AIF/UCITS reports; FMA market disclosures | Update client data capture; reconcile reporting systems; appoint CRS owner |
| Crypto-asset providers (CASPs) | MiCAR periodic reports (once operational); AML/CTF reporting; custody attestations | Complete CASP authorisation forms; implement custody proofs; test reporting exports |
Where entities also engage in token issuance or initial coin offerings, additional disclosure and reporting obligations may apply at the intersection of securities law and MiCAR.
The FMA’s published supervisory focus areas for 2026 place governance quality, internal controls and conduct risk at the centre of its supervisory programme. For every supervised entity, whether bank, investment firm or CASP, this translates into heightened expectations regarding board oversight, fit-and-proper standards, outsourcing governance, cyber resilience and third-party risk management. The likely practical effect will be an increase in thematic on-site inspections targeting these specific areas during 2026.
Boards should ensure the following items are addressed and documented by board resolution:
Industry observers expect the FMA supervisory focus 2026 to result in specific information requests directed at boards. Entities that can demonstrate pre-emptive compliance, supported by contemporaneous board minutes, will be better positioned during supervisory interactions.
Liechtenstein’s alignment with the EU Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD) framework requires banks to maintain credible recovery plans and cooperate with the FMA in resolution planning. The 2025 harmonisation strengthened the statutory basis for resolution tools, and the FMA’s 2026 supervisory agenda signals continued attention to resolution preparedness. Banks that have not updated their recovery plans since the legislative overhaul face a compliance gap that should be addressed urgently.
The likely practical effect of these requirements is that banks will need to allocate dedicated project resources to resolution planning during the first half of 2026. For a comparative perspective on licensing requirements in other jurisdictions, see our guide to obtaining an MSB licence in the US.
The evolving EU Listing Act framework is reshaping how issuers prepare prospectuses and passport securities offerings across EEA borders. For entities using Liechtenstein as their home Member State, these changes affect both the content requirements of prospectuses and the procedural mechanics of cross-border notification. EU Listing Act passporting now involves streamlined notification procedures, but also demands more precise disclosure on certain risk factors and sustainability-related information.
Liechtenstein’s position as an EEA member but non-EU state gives issuers access to the full EEA passport while operating under a regulatory framework that benefits from close FMA engagement. Industry observers consider this combination increasingly attractive for mid-market issuers seeking efficient access to European capital markets.
The breadth of the 2025–2026 reforms demands a structured response. The following six-point action plan distils this article’s guidance into an executive-level roadmap:
Liechtenstein financial market law 2026 creates both obligations and opportunities. Entities that act decisively in the first half of the year will find themselves well-positioned for supervisory engagement, EEA passporting and market confidence. Those seeking jurisdiction-specific counsel can find a Liechtenstein financial markets lawyer through our directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Thomas Stern at Bergt Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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