Legal services:

Comprehensive legal solutions for contracts, disputes, and compliance. Our expert team ensures legal protection and strategic guidance for your business.

AML consulting:

Specialised AML consulting to develop and maintain robust anti-money laundering policies. We assess risks, offer ongoing support and provide tailored AML services.

Obtaining a crypto license:

We offer licensing and ongoing support for your crypto-business. We also offer licences in the most popular jurisdictions.

Registration of legal entities:

Efficient legal entity registration support. We manage documentation and interaction with the authorities, ensuring a seamless process for establishing your business.

Opening bank accounts:

We facilitate the opening of bank accounts through our extensive network of partners (European banks). Hassle-free process, tailored to your business needs.

COREDO TEAM

Nikita Veremeev
Nikita Veremeev
CEO
Pavel Kos
Pavel Kos
Head of the legal department
Grigorii Lutcenko
Grigorii Lutcenko
Head of AML department
Annet Abdurzakova
Annet Abdurzakova
Head of the Customer Success Department
Basang Ungunov
Basang Ungunov
Lawyer at Legal Department
Egor Pykalev
Egor Pykalev
AML consultant
Yulia Zhidikhanova
Yulia Zhidikhanova
Customer Success Associate
Pavel Batsulin
Pavel Batsulin
AML consultant
Diana Alchaeva
Diana Alchaeva
Customer Success Associate
Johann Schneider
Johann Schneider
Lawyer
Daniil Saprykin
Daniil Saprykin
Customer Success Associate

Our clients

COREDO’s clients are manufacturers, traders and financial companies, as well as wealthy clients from European and CIS countries.

Effective communication and fast project realisation guarantee satisfaction of our customers.

Exactly
Unitpay
Grispay
Newreality
Chicrypto
Xchanger
CONVERTIQ
Crypto Engine
Pion
When founders of fintech‑projects, bank spin‑offs or corporate treasurers turn to us at COREDO, the first question today sounds like this: “Is it even possible to build a viable stablecoin model in Europe after MiCA, and how can it be done legally and profitably?”
From years of working on company registrations in the EU, the UK, Singapore and the CIS, as well as licensing crypto and payment services, I see: MiCA does not kill stablecoins, it kills weak models. Stablecoin regulation in the EU is becoming stricter, but this very fact opens a window of opportunity for those ready to build a transparent structure, reserves and compliance at the level of a financial institution.
Below is a systematic breakdown of how MiCA and related regimes are changing the market, which stablecoin models remain viable, and how we at COREDO structure such projects “turnkey”: from the legal entity and license to the AML framework and tax reporting.

MiCA: EMT or ART for stablecoins

Illustration for the section «MiCA: EMT or ART for stablecoins» in the article «MiCA and stablecoins – viable models»

MiCA divides stablecoins into two basic classes:

  • e‑money tokens (EMT): essentially tokenized electronic money, 1:1 pegged to a single fiat currency, most often the euro.
  • asset‑referenced tokens (ART) – tokens pegged to a basket of currencies and/or other assets (for example, a multi-currency stablecoin or a token backed by a mix of fiat+bonds+gold).
This fork is a strategic decision, not merely a legal label. It determines:

  • regulatory regime;
  • reserve requirements;
  • possibilities for use in payments;
  • supervision (ordinary or “enhanced” for significant tokens).
In recent projects the COREDO team first modeled the financial and operational architecture of the stablecoin, and only then determined what would be more advantageous for the client: EMT for a payments focus or ART for more flexible treasury/investment logic.

When it makes more sense to use EMT

EMT is closer to classic electronic money. For business this means:

  • the token is fully fiat‑backed (usually by the euro), without a multi-asset basket;
  • the ability to position the product as a payment and settlement instrument rather than a speculative asset;
  • strict requirements for the issuer: the status of an electronic money institution or a credit institution, full MiCA compliance and an e‑money regime.

For projects that target stablecoin use cases in payments, e‑commerce, B2B settlements and corporate treasuries, EMT most often becomes the default model.

When ART provides more flexibility

ART allow:

  • issuing multi-currency tokens (for example, pegged to a basket of EUR+USD+CHF);
  • including several types of assets in the reserve (cash, government securities, sometimes highly liquid commercial instruments);
  • building more complex treasury and investment scenarios.
At the same time MiCA requires that the governance model, disclosure and reserve discipline correspond to the level of systemically significant financial products, especially if the stablecoin seeks the status of a significant token with enhanced EBA supervision.

MiCA and algorithmic tokens: what’s prohibited

Illustration for the section 'MiCA and algorithmic tokens: what's prohibited' in the article 'MiCA and stablecoins – viable models'

MiCA makes its priorities very clear:

  • a ban on algorithmic stablecoins in the EU in their familiar market form;
  • the de facto exit from the European market of partially backed models where reserves do not cover 100% of liabilities;
  • a tougher stance toward schemes where price stability is maintained only by an algorithm and market mechanisms, without transparent reserves.
In practice this means:

  • projects with algorithmic stablecoins either cease to be ‘stablecoins’ under MiCA, or take such a token outside the EU;
  • exchanges and payment platforms will delist non-compliant tokens for European customers: otherwise they themselves risk being classified as CASPs;
  • any model where the reserve is “something approximately liquid” without strict limits on quality and duration will not pass MiCA scrutiny.
When a fintech client came to us with the idea of a ‘semi-algorithmic’ stablecoin for Europe, the COREDO team’s task was not to ‘shoehorn’ the project into the text of the regulation, but to honestly show: either you rebuild the product toward EMT/ART with full backing, or you work with segments outside the EU. This is one of those cases where reliability and long-term viability are more important than quick launches.

Stablecoin reserves under MiCA: architecture and audit

Illustration for the section “Stablecoin reserves under MiCA: architecture and audit” in the article “MiCA and stablecoins – viable models”

MiCA and the future supranational practice in the EU effectively enshrine the concept of high-quality reserve assets:

  • cash held in accounts with reputable banks;
  • short-term government bonds (HQLA);
  • strict limits on duration, concentration, and credit risk.
From a business perspective the key question is not “what can be placed in the reserve”, but how to structure the reserve portfolio so that:
  • obtain Licensing and regulatory supervision;
  • withstand stress scenarios (withdrawal of 30–40% of assets over a short period);
  • maintain acceptable project economics.
From recent cases: the solution developed by COREDO for one of the euro-stablecoin issuers included:

  • legal structuring of the reserve through a separate SPV in the EU;
  • segregation of reserves between bank accounts and an HQLA portfolio with strict limits;
  • implementation of independent reserve audits with regular publication of reports for users and the regulator;
  • documented stress-testing procedures and a liquidity plan in case of peak redemptions.
For clients this is critical for two reasons:
  1. MiCA stablecoins with high-quality reserves will have a competitive advantage over ‘grey-zone’ tokens that European CASPs will sooner or later limit access to.
  2. Large corporate users and financial institutions will look specifically at:

    • the reserve structure,
    • liquidity management procedures,
    • independent audit.

Redemption rights under MiCA: holder rights and issuer economics

Illustration for the section \

MiCA enshrines a key principle: a stablecoin holder has the right to redeem the token for fiat (or the underlying asset) at par, within a reasonable time frame and on clear terms.

In COREDO’s practice this translates into a number of mandatory architectural elements:

  • clear redemption procedures: who, where, in what format submits the request;
  • predefined execution timeframes and fees;
  • delineation of rights: retail users, professional participants, large corporate clients.
A point that many underestimate: MiCA’s ban on paying interest on stablecoins breaks the familiar marketing model of a “yield-bearing token deposit”.
To maintain the product’s appeal, COREDO’s team in real-world projects proposes alternative mechanisms:

  • programmable discounts on fees;
  • priority access to liquidity and limits;
  • integration of the stablecoin into DeFi infrastructure (there, yield is generated at the protocol level, not in the token itself, which is important for MiCA).

CASP, MiCA and passporting in the EU

Illustration for the section «CASP, MiCA and passporting in the EU» in the article «MiCA and stablecoins – viable models»

Any issuer or platform working with stablecoins in Europe encounters the concept of crypto‑asset service providers (CASP).

CASP under MiCA are:

  • exchanges and brokers;
  • custodians;
  • payment and wallet providers;
  • token issuance and placement platforms.

Key idea: by obtaining a CASP license in one EU jurisdiction, you gain passporting for services across the Union. This significantly increases the value of choosing the right country for registration and licensing.

The COREDO team in such projects typically handles several tasks:

  • selecting an EU jurisdiction taking into account the required license (EMT/ART, CASP, e‑money, etc.), local regulator practice and the tax environment;
  • designing a CASP compliance strategy in the EU: AML/KYC, the Travel Rule for cryptoassets, operational resilience, IT governance;
  • support in preparing the white paper, internal policies, and contractual framework with users and partners.
For an entrepreneur, this means that a proper start in one EU country, with professional legal support, is extrapolated to the entire Union market — without the need to go through regulators in each country “from scratch”.

AML/KYC and the Travel Rule: practical compliance

MiCA is embedded in the broader trend of tightening AML/CFT. In the EU this trend is being reinforced by:

  • The Travel Rule for crypto-assets, the obligation to transmit sender and recipient data for transfers, even when they occur in stablecoins;
  • a harmonized AML approach at the EU level;
  • increasing attention to cross-border stablecoin compliance.
Our experience at COREDO has shown that sustainable projects build an AML framework like a bank’s, even if legally they are “just” a fintech.
What this means in practice:

  • KYC/EDD processes for different types of clients (retail, corporate, financial institutions);
  • transaction monitoring using risk scoring and scenario analysis;
  • integration with sanctions and PEP-screening providers;
  • AML policies that take into account not only EU requirements but also related regimes (for example, stablecoin regulation in Singapore or Hong Kong, if the project operates globally).
In one project with an Asian fintech entering Europe with a stablecoin and a payments platform, the COREDO team built a single AML framework aligned with:

  • MiCA and the European AML framework;
  • the local regulator in Singapore;
  • the forthcoming DAC8 requirements on the exchange of tax information for crypto-assets.

DAC8 and reporting on stablecoins

MiCA is not the only regulatory layer. On the horizon is DAC8, which introduces tax reporting for transactions in crypto-assets, including stablecoins.
For businesses and CASPs this means:

  • the obligation to collect and transmit to tax authorities data on clients’ transactions;
  • being brought within the scope of the automatic exchange of information (AEOI) for digital assets;
  • the need to set up processes and IT‑infrastructure in advance, rather than ‘catching up’ with the regulator at the last moment.
In real projects we are already incorporating into the platform architecture:

  • segmentation of clients based on their tax residency;
  • the ability to generate reports in line with DAC8 standards;
  • notifications and explanations for corporate clients so that their treasuries and chief financial officers understand how stablecoin operations will be reflected in reporting.

MiCA and liquidity management

If you look at MiCA not from the issuer’s perspective but from the corporate user’s, the key questions are different:
  • whether MiCA-compliant regulated stablecoins can be used for daily settlements with counterparties in the EU;
  • how stablecoins affect liquidity management and treasury strategies;
  • what to choose for international settlements: CBDC, stablecoins, or traditional bank payments.
In a large corporate case, the COREDO team assisted the treasury of a European group:

  • to develop a policy for using stablecoins in cross-border settlements with counterparties in Asia;
  • to identify a pool of MiCA-compliant euro stablecoins with adequate reserves and compliance;
  • to integrate these instruments into cash-management systems and counterparty risk limits.
Result for the business:

  • reduced cost and time of international payments;
  • at the same time, MiCA compliance, the AML regime, and future DAC8 reporting.

MiCA and regulation in Singapore, Hong Kong, the UK and the US

For projects that are global from the outset, MiCA is only one of the regimes. On the horizon:
  • stablecoin regulation in Singapore – a balanced regime with an emphasis on payments and enterprise solutions;
  • stablecoin regulation in Hong Kong and the emerging Hong Kong stablecoin licensing regime;
  • the UK’s approach, where stablecoins fall within the perimeter of financial regulation but with its own specifics;
  • the debate in the US around GENIUS Act stablecoins and competing bills.
In complex COREDO projects for clients from Asia and the CIS we often build a multi-jurisdictional strategy:

  • EMT/ART under MiCA – for access to the EU and eurozone markets;
  • a license and architecture for Singapore: for Asian payments and corporate clients;
  • possible integration with Hong Kong or UK regimes as a scaling option.
Key takeaway: MiCA is becoming a reference point that other jurisdictions tend to align with one way or another, especially regarding:
  • reserves and transparency;
  • consumer protection;
  • systemic stablecoins and oversight by central authorities.

How we structure stablecoin projects at COREDO

For a stablecoin project to have a chance at a long life under MiCA and related regimes, it must be built from the outset as a licensable financial business, not as a technical experiment.
A typical roadmap that the COREDO team builds with clients looks like this:

  1. Strategic session and model selection

    • EMT or ART;
    • payment, trading, or corporate-treasury focus;
    • target jurisdictions: EU (specific countries), United Kingdom, Singapore, Dubai, etc.
  2. Legal structuring and choice of jurisdiction

  3. Reserves and liquidity management

    • reserve policy: composition, HQLA limits, allocation;
    • daily, weekly, and stress liquidity management procedures;
    • preparation for independent reserve audits and regular reporting.
  4. MiCA compliance and governance

    • development of a governance framework for the stablecoin issuer: governing bodies, controls, risk committees;
    • preparation of the white paper in accordance with MiCA;
    • implementation of operational and IT procedures for CASP.
  5. AML/KYC and Travel Rule

    • development of AML policies taking into account MiCA, the EU’s general AML directives, and the local law of the chosen jurisdiction;
    • selection and integration of technological solutions for KYC, transaction monitoring, and the Travel Rule;
    • training the client’s team and regular AML updates.
  6. Tax and reporting architecture (including DAC8)

    • analysis of tax implications in key jurisdictions;
    • designing processes to meet DAC8 and AEOI requirements for crypto assets;
    • integration with corporate accounting and treasury systems.
  7. Scaling and cross-border strategy

    • preparation for passporting CASP services across the EU;
    • assessing expansion to Singapore, Hong Kong, Dubai, or the United Kingdom;
    • adapting documentation and compliance to new regimes.

What an entrepreneur and a CFO should take into account

From daily work with clients I see several practical takeaways that save months and the equivalent of hundreds of thousands:
  • Design the stablecoin from the start for MiCA, even if the initial launch focuses on another region. Reworking the architecture afterwards in Europe is costly.
  • Treat reserves and MiCA compliance as part of the unit economics, not just a regulatory burden: access to European platforms and large corporate clients depends on it.
  • Embed AML and DAC8 readiness from the outset: many business models collapse not because of the token idea, but because of inadequate compliance and reporting.
  • See MiCA as an opportunity for differentiation: regulated stablecoins with transparent reserves and a clear legal framework will outperform “grey” alternatives, especially in the B2B and enterprise segments.
At COREDO we have been supporting international business since 2016 — from company registration in the EU, Asia and the CIS to obtaining financial licenses and building AML frameworks. During this time I have seen the crypto market go through several cycles and regulators move from an experimental approach to a systemic one.
MiCA, stablecoin regulation in Singapore and Hong Kong, initiatives like the GENIUS Act in the US: this is not noise, but a new foundation for those building a long-term fintech business.
If you, as a founder, CEO or chief financial officer, view stablecoins as a tool for global payments, liquidity management or developing a fintech platform, it’s important not just to “be on trend with EU crypto regulation”, but to design the product from the outset as a regulated financial service.
And here, sound legal, financial and AML support stops being a “consulting expense” and becomes part of the architecture of your competitive advantage.

In international groups the question of a KYC policy today sounds very direct: a single standard or local adaptation? As someone who has been developing COREDO since 2016 and sees live cases from the EU, Asia and the CIS every day, I will confidently answer: formally, a single framework is needed; practically — without thoughtful local adaptation the business simply will not survive.

Why the old KYC approach does not work

  • payment systems,
  • correspondent accounts,
  • licenses (crypto, EMI, PI, forex, investment),
  • marketplace ecosystems and fintech partners.
Added to this is the shift from classical KYC (Know Your Customer) to the KYC + KYT (Know Your Transaction) pairing and the Travel Rule FATF for crypto and cross-border operations.
  • Each jurisdiction requires it “a little differently”: forms, timeframes, documents, EDD levels.
  • Payment partners and banks practice over-compliance: they check every client and every transaction, block accounts, and require KYC updates “more often than is written in the law.”
  • Scaling into 5–10+ countries turns into chaos: different procedures, different IT systems, different interpretations of AML risks in subsidiaries.

Group-wide KYC standard: components and requirements

When an international group comes to me and says: “we need a single KYC policy for 6–10 countries”, I always start with the architecture. Without architecture you end up with a set of local regulations that contradict each other and do not withstand the scrutiny of a correspondent bank or regulator.
  • Risk appetite and client typologies

    • retail, SME, corporate, financial institutions;
    • high-risk segments: CBI clients (investment migration), crypto brokers, PSPs, P2P platforms.
    • logic: whom you are willing to serve at all, and whom: not in any country.
  • KYC classification and verification levels

    • standard verification,
    • enhanced due diligence (EDD),
    • enhanced checks for PEPs, sanctioned and CBI clients.
    Uniformity is important here: if EDD for a corporate client in one subsidiary includes an analysis of the origin of capital over 3 years, and in another: only a declaration, the global risk profile is distorted.
  • Basic 15-step KYC process for legal entities

    At COREDO we often build a multistep process where, regardless of the country, the following mandatory steps are present:
    • company identification (registration documents, articles of association);
    • identification of beneficial owners and the control structure;
    • verification of directors and key controlling persons;
    • analysis of discrepancies between passports and tax residency;
    • proof of address;
    • checks against sanctions, PEPs, negative media;
    • verification of source of funds and sources of income;
    • assessment of the business model and transaction geography;
    • assigning a risk rating;
    • decision: onboard / reject / EDD / additional requests.
  • KYT policy and transaction monitoring

    • rules for real-time monitoring of suspicious transactions;
    • trigger logic by countries and counterparties;
    • approach to blocking/holding transactions and requesting documents.
  • Requirements for digital compliance and cybersecurity

    • use of digital identification systems and eIDAS (for the EU);
    • requirements for storing KYC files and activity logs;
    • basic cybersecurity standards: client data protection, access control, logging of verifications.
  • Role of an independent compliance officer

    • uniform qualification requirements;
    • independent reporting to the Board of Directors;
    • veto power over risky onboardings.
This “framework” is uniform for the whole group — regardless of whether the unit operates in Prague, Nicosia, Tallinn or Singapore. But at the procedural level, local nuances in each country must be taken into account.

Where local adaptation of KYC is mandatory
Even a perfectly built global standard does not negate the fact that EU KYC requirements, fintech regulation in Asia and the practices of CIS regulators differ.

I see three levels where local adaptation is not just desirable, but critical.

Requirements and timelines

Examples from COREDO practice:
  • In a number of EU countries regulators are moving from “simplified verification” to a strict model of full KYC checks for almost all categories of clients.
  • Verification timeframes are shortening: what used to take up to 10 days is now expected to be completed within 2–5 days: especially in fintech, so the client does not go to a competitor.
  • For payment companies and crypto licenses, local regulators (for example, in Lithuania, Estonia, Cyprus) set separate requirements for the structure of AML/KYC policies, the content of reporting and data formats.
The COREDO team regularly adapts clients’ global documents to:
  • EU directives, PSD2, eIDAS for payment and fintech companies;
  • requirements of local Asian supervisory authorities, aligned with FATF Guidance;
  • requirements for machine-readable AML reporting and online monitoring by regulators.

Substance and real presence requirements

In the EU and some Asian jurisdictions, substance requirements have become a key filter: a single legal entity is no longer sufficient.
  • a real office and staff,
  • local directors,
  • risk management and on-site compliance,
  • the volume of operations in the jurisdiction.
When we structure international groups, the solution developed at COREDO often includes:
  • reallocation of functions (risk, AML, IT) between countries;
  • justification of why KYC functions are centralized or, conversely, localized;
  • the argument for substance in the exact country where you want to obtain a license or a bank account.

Practice of banks and payment partners

Even if you formally comply with the law, it is precisely over-compliance interIt’s up to certain financial institutions to decide whether they’ll open an account for you or not.
A typical situation clients come to me with: “We have a license and good turnover, but banks and payment partners refuse, citing KYC.”
  • unclear beneficiary structure;
  • mismatch between passports and tax residency;
  • lack of transparent evidence of source of funds;
  • weak group-level KYC policy and absence of local procedures.
COREDO’s practice confirms: adapting KYC processes to the checklists of specific banks and PSPs (especially in the EU and the UK) significantly increases the chances of approval.

KYC vs KYT and the Travel Rule: what’s changed

  • implementation of the FATF Travel Rule: transmission of sender and recipient data between VASPs (Virtual Asset Service Providers) and payment institutions;
  • real-time monitoring of sender and recipient against sanctions and risk lists;
  • use of blockchain analyzers to assess the risk of addresses and transactions.
The COREDO team helps clients:
  • restructure internal policy from “one-time KYC at onboarding” to continuous KYT monitoring;
  • implement regulatory synchronization between countries: so that transactions passing through the EU and Asia comply with unified rules on data and reporting;
  • prepare for online transaction monitoring by regulators and mandatory data exchange between countries.
Without this transformation, payment partners and banks increasingly block operations and accounts: formally, “due to KYC/AML non-compliance”, in fact, because of the lack of mature KYT and Travel Rule compliance.

KYC for corporate clients: structure

  • Basic KYC (all jurisdictions)

    • standard set of company and beneficiary documents;
    • minimal screening for adverse factors;
    • initial risk scoring.
  • Enhanced KYC / EDD

    • detailed analysis of structure and ultimate control;
    • in-depth verification of source of funds (bank statements, contracts, financial statements);
    • check of corporate history, M&A deals, changes of beneficiaries;
    • monitoring of PEP status and political risks.
  • Special scenarios (CBI, high-risk clients)

    For CBI clients and investment migration, international banks and regulators treat them as high risk.
    • prepare a rationale for the client’s economic substance;
    • demonstrate the consistency of passport, residency, and actual center of interests;
    • document the veracity of the source of funds and the reasons for structuring assets through a particular jurisdiction.
For international groups it is important that this multi-level process is logically unified, but adapted in terms of documents, timelines and reporting for each country.

Do KYC automation and digital compliance pay off?

A separate set of questions that CFOs and COOs ask me: “What is the ROI on investments in KYC automation?”
The COREDO team sees several durable effects:
  • Reduction of onboarding times from 10 to 2–5 days for corporate clients thanks to digital identification systems and automated checklists.
  • Reduced burden on compliance departments: some procedures move to automatic screening and machine-readable reporting for regulators.
  • Increased trust from banks and partners: mature digital compliance and cybersecurity are already mandatory criteria when selecting partners.
Practically, this includes:
  • implementation of digital identification systems and integration with eIDAS for the EU;
  • use of solutions for machine-readable AML reporting and automatic report generation;
  • implementation of modules for real-time transaction monitoring and sanctions screening;
  • building the internal architecture of embedded AML/KYC procedures into an IT or fintech company’s product.
Here it is important not to “buy trendy software”, but to competently integrate it into the policy architecture: the COREDO team often starts with a review of processes and then selects technological solutions.

How to avoid bank account freezes

One of the most painful questions from clients: “How to avoid account blocking due to KYC?”
I always say honestly: you cannot eliminate the risk entirely. But it can be controlled.
  • there is a single group KYC/AML standard, understandable to banks and PSPs;
  • local procedures meet the expectations of the regulators of the specific countries;
  • the company establishes KYT and Travel Rule processes in advance according to international requirements;
  • a set of evidence of source of funds and justification of the group structure is prepared.
In cases where a business has already faced blockings, the COREDO team:
  • analyzes exactly where the KYC processes did not satisfy the partner;
  • refines the KYC policy and client dossiers;
  • builds communication with the bank or payment institution, explaining the business model and compliance framework.

Single standard and local adaptation

To summarize COREDO’s practical experience in one formula:

For an international group it is not enough to “just adapt to the law”. A strategic KYC framework is needed that withstands scrutiny from regulators, banks and partners simultaneously in the EU, Asia and the CIS.

  • Define global risk appetite and target markets

    Answer honestly: which clients you are willing to serve and in which jurisdictions this is permissible.
  • Build a single group KYC/AML standard

    • policy structure,
    • KYC/KYT processes,
    • requirements for EDD and CBI,
    • digital perimeter and cybersecurity.
  • Make local adaptation by country

    • take into account EU requirements, national laws, PSD2, eIDAS, FATF guidance;
    • embed substance and local regulatory expectations;
    • synchronize reporting and data formats.
  • Integrate KYC/AML into the product and operations

    especially for fintech, payment companies, crypto services; ensure real-time monitoring and automation of key procedures.
  • Regularly review the policy to meet new requirements

    • FATF and the EU update standards,
    • Asian regulators are increasingly aligning with them,
    • by 2026 the list of mandatory KYC and KYT elements will only growwiden.
Over the years the COREDO team has accompanied clients through the full cycle: from the first foreign company to groups present in 10+ countries and holding multiple financial licenses.
This experience convinced me: a sustainable international model is impossible without a mature, strategically designed KYC, where a single standard and local adaptation do not contradict each other but mutually reinforce each other.
And if your group currently requires company registration abroad, obtaining licenses, or building or rebuilding KYC/AML frameworks, this is precisely where the COREDO team and I usually step in as a long-term partner, not just as a “registrar” or “licensing lawyer”.

When the founder of a fintech project comes to me with the question: “In which country is it best to obtain an EMI license and how can this be done without fatal mistakes?”, I always start not with the country, but with the business model. It is the business model that determines where you can operate sustainably, with understandable regulatory risks and a predictable ROI.

Over years of COREDO‘s work in Europe, Asia and the CIS, the team has taken clients through the entire journey: from the first idea “I want my own EMI license in the EU” to functioning payment institutions with passporting across the EEA, audits to international standards and a well-thought-out AML function. In this article I will distill that experience into a practical guide: how to choose a jurisdiction, which requirements are actually painful in practice, where the boundaries of regulatory risk appetite lie and how to reduce the likelihood of rejection at launch.

EMI license in the EU: what you need to know

Illustration for the section «EMI license in the EU: what you need to know» in the article «EMI license in the EU – which country has lower regulatory risks»

EMI license in Europe: this is permission to operate as an issuer of electronic money and to provide payment services based on the PSD2 and EMD2 directives. Essentially, an EMI license in the EU allows you to:

  • issue electronic money (wallet balances, prepaid solutions, stored value);
  • open and maintain payment accounts for clients;
  • provide payment and electronic money services for B2B and B2C models;
  • build white‑label solutions for partners and scale a fintech platform across the EEA via passporting of the EMI license.

In any European country, the regulator looks at an EMI provider through three key areas:

  • business model and resilience (business plan, profitability, risk management);
  • compliance for the EMI provider (AML/KYC, governance, fit & proper management);
  • IT and operational infrastructure (security, incident management, safeguarding of funds).

My practical advice: don’t treat an EMI as a ‘checkbox’ or a shiny status. It’s an infrastructure solution for business for the next 5–10 years. If you don’t expect to operate at least on that horizon, the partner-provider model might be more appropriate for now.

Full EMI license or small EMI/PI: where to start?

Illustration for the section «Full EMI license or small EMI / PI: where to start» in the article «EMI license in the EU – in which country are regulatory risks lower»

Many projects come with a strict request: “we need only a full EMI license.” In practice, it makes sense to consider three options:

  • full EMI license
    Suitable if you plan to scale across the entire EEA, process significant volumes and work with different segments (B2B/B2C, cross‑border payments, wallets, cards, API integrations for open banking).
  • small EMI license (restricted Electronic Money Issuer License)
    This is a compromise: local or volume‑limited operations, simplified requirements, but without passporting across the EEA. In some countries it is used as a “training ground”: to prove to the regulator, investors and yourself that the model works.
  • PI (payment institution)
    PI license in the EU allows providing payment services without the status of an electronic money issuer. For some models — money remittance, acquiring or certain B2B solutions — a PI can be sufficient.

I strongly do not recommend choosing between EMI and PI “based on a feeling.” At COREDO we always start by analysing use cases: which products you offer, to whom, in which countries, what limits, where the client balance arises, how you earn money, and what the structure of fees and float is.

How to choose a country for an EMI license

Illustration for the section “How to choose a country for an EMI license” in the article “EMI license in the EU – in which country are regulatory risks lower”

The phrase “which country is best to obtain an EMI license” is incorrect by itself. More accurate is “which jurisdiction is optimal for my business model, risk profile and scaling strategy.”

I always recommend entrepreneurs look at a country through five areas:

  1. regulatory risks of an EMI and the regulator’s risk appetite
    • How does the regulator respond to new business models?
    • How often do the rules change?
    • What is the supervisory practice (frequency of inspections, tone of communication, predictability of decisions)?
  2. Minimum capital for an EMI and capitalization requirements
    • Initial capital: typically €350,000 for a classic EMI model in the EU.
    • Ongoing capital adequacy: methodology for calculating capital against transaction volumes and risks.
    • You need not only a formal amount but a deliberate model: where you will hold the capital, how to present it under IFRS, how the capital structure will change as you grow.
  3. Substance requirements for an EMI (office, staff)
    • Real business presence: local office, employees, resident directors.
    • Role of the local team: who actually makes decisions, who is responsible for compliance, risk management, IT.
  4. IT requirements for an EMI license
    • compliance with requirements for ICT and security risk management;
    • architecture, redundancy, disaster recovery plan;
    • management of cyber and operational risks of an EMI, working with outsourcing and cloud providers.
  5. Tax aspects and the group’s overall structure
    • compatibility of the country with your flows (B2B, B2C, cross‑border payments);
    • double taxation treaties;
    • the jurisdiction’s impact on investors’ valuation of the project and future funding rounds.

COREDO’s task in such projects is not simply to “register” but to help build a structure that will withstand scrutiny from the regulator, the auditor and investors simultaneously.

Jurisdictions for an EMI license: where and for whom

Illustration for the section «Jurisdictions for an EMI license: where and for whom» in the article «EMI license in the EU – in which country regulatory risks are lower»

Below: not a “country ranking”, but typical scenarios that I see in projects coming to COREDO.

EMI license in Lithuania

Lithuania has long become a magnet for fintech projects oriented to the EEA. For many international players, an EMI license in Lithuania is a practical way to enter the European market with predictable timelines and transparent requirements.

When this country makes sense:

  • EMI license passporting across the EEA is critical for you;
  • you are building a product focused on the EU, but the team is distributed across different countries;
  • you are ready for serious work on IT and risk management: the regulator pays close attention to ICT, operational risks and safeguarding.

In practice, the COREDO team pays especially close attention to Lithuanian projects regarding:

  • the three‑year business plan and stress‑testing of the model;
  • IT architecture: redundancy, incident monitoring, logging, change management;
  • AML/KYC model: how the risk‑based approach is reflected in procedures and IT systems.

EMI licence in Ireland

An EMI license in Ireland is most often considered by more mature projects and groups that are building a European hub.

Key features:

  • high requirements from the Central Bank of Ireland for the governance structure, fit & proper management, and independent control functions;
  • a strong focus on compliance for the EMI provider: AML, risk management, internal audit;
  • increased attention to business model sustainability and long‑term viability.

I often see teams underestimating the cost of compliance in Ireland: this includes not only in‑house specialists, but also external consultants, auditors, and the schedule of regular checks. The reward for this is a high level of market and investor trust.

EMI license in the Czech Republic

Czechia appeals to those looking for a balance between operating costs, the level of regulatory oversight, and the ability to work with clients from different European countries.

Features:

  • a straightforward infrastructure for company registration and establishing substance;
  • reasonable requirements for local presence and governance;
  • the possibility to combine an EMI license with operational activity in Central Europe.

Client case: the COREDO team supported a project that considered EMI in Lithuania versus EMI in Czechia. In the end the strategy split: Lithuania — for scaling a B2C product across the EEA; Czechia — for the operational back‑office, development and part of the B2B direction. This is a scenario when one country for an EMI license is not the only answer.

EMI license in the UK: FCA requirements

An EMI license in the UK is the choice of those who consciously accept a high level of regulatory supervision by the FCA, expecting in return a strong brand and access to the British ecosystem.

What is important to consider:

  • the FCA’s requirements for governance, risk management, and transparency of the beneficiary structure are especially detailed;
  • a lot of attention is paid to outsourcing and service providers for EMIs, including cloud solutions;
  • requirements for cybersecurity, incident reporting and IT resilience are being strengthened.

For an international project focused on Europe and Asia, it makes sense to consider the UK as part of a broader structure rather than the sole entry point.

Mauritius: EMI license for an offshore setup

An EMI license in Mauritius raises many questions among entrepreneurs: «how reliable is it to build an international fintech business based on such a license?»

I’ve seen successful cases where Mauritius:

  • was used as a hub for international settlements outside the EEA;
  • was combined with a European structure (for example, Lithuania / Ireland) to serve clients in the EU;
  • allowed optimizing tax burden and group structure while meeting substance requirements.

Key point: EU EMI versus EMI in Mauritius: it’s not “which is better”, but “which markets do you serve, which jurisdictional risks are you willing to accept, and how do your investors assess it”. In projects of this type the COREDO team always models not only the regulatory picture, but also the risk‑adjusted ROI: taking into account compliance costs, potential correspondent bank restrictions and perception by partners.

Problems of the original headline:

Illustration for the section 'Problems of the original headline:' in the article 'EMI license in the EU – in which country are regulatory risks lower'

  • Unnecessary jargon (‘Typical’, ‘bottlenecks’)
  • Sounds like an academic paper, not a search query
  • Contains 9 words, which exceeds the recommendation

Bottlenecks in EMI licensing

To reduce the risk of refusal to grant an EMI license, I always ask clients to honestly assess three areas before approaching the regulator.

Ownership structure and beneficiaries

The regulator pays close attention to:

  • transparency of beneficial ownership;
  • sources of funds (source of funds / source of wealth);
  • the history and reputation of shareholders and directors (fit and proper test).

Complex multi-level structures without a clear economic rationale increase EMI regulatory risks in any country. At COREDO we often start with “clean-up” of the structure: removing unnecessary layers, putting corporate documents in order, and preparing justification for the ownership chain.

Business plan and revenue model

For the regulator it’s important not only to see a three-year financial plan, but also to understand:

  • how you earn (subscription, commission, interchange income, FX margin, B2B fee);
  • how you manage regulatory risk (for example, high-risk segments, cross-border payments);
  • what will happen to the company under stress scenarios: loss of a key partner, an increase in chargebacks, regulatory changes.

The COREDO team practices stress-testing business models for an EMI license: we model several scenarios and see how capital, liquidity and compliance costs change.

AML/KYC and a risk-based approach

AML/KYC procedures for an EMI provider are where regulators most often raise additional questions. Typical issues:

  • declarative policies without a description of the real process;
  • lack of linkage between the client risk map and triggers in the IT system;
  • an unreasonably lenient or, conversely, excessively strict approach to high-risk segments.

I see entrepreneurs worry that strong risk-based AML will “kill conversion”. In practice, a well-designed approach allows:

  • to segment customers by risk and build different KYC pathways;
  • to use data providers and automation to speed up the low-risk flow;
  • to keep a “manual mode” and enhanced Due Diligence for high-risk.

COREDO regularly helps fintech companies balance AML requirements for EMI companies and marketing KPIs: the goal is for compliance not to hinder growth, but to protect it.

IT architecture, cybersecurity and outsourcing from the regulator’s perspective

In European projects I increasingly see that the outcome of an EMI license application is decided at the level of IT and security architecture.

Key areas of regulatory focus:

  • IT and security risk management for EMI: incident response policy, disaster recovery, business continuity;
  • API architecture and operation logging;
  • segregated environments (development / testing / production) and change management;
  • use of cloud services and critical outsourcing.

When preparing for licensing the COREDO team goes through with the client in detail:

  • the infrastructure diagram (servers, data centers, cloud providers, VPN, key services);
  • data flows (including customer data, payment data, logs);
  • backup model and RTO/RPO metrics.

Regulators need to see that you manage not only financial but also technical risks. This applies both to supervision of EMI’s cyber and operational risks, and to subsequent incident reporting.

Timeline and cost of an EMI license

To the question “how long does obtaining an EMI license in the EU take” I always answer with one word: it depends. But there is a realistic range.

With preparation taken into account:

  • analysis of the business model and choice of jurisdiction;
  • company structuring, substance, appointment of directors and key functions;
  • preparation of the business plan, policies, procedures, IT descriptions;
  • preliminary consultations with the regulator (where appropriate);

A full turnkey project in Europe typically takes 9–18 months, sometimes longer: if the model is complex or the group structure is non-trivial.

The cost of obtaining an EMI license consists of:

  • minimum share capital (for example, the EMI minimum share capital of 350,000 euros for some EU countries);
  • professional services (legal support for an EMI license, financial modeling, IT and AML design);
  • expenses for substance: office, local team, directors, control functions;
  • subsequent audit and an ongoing compliance function.

COREDO’s task is to give you in advance a transparent picture of TCO (total cost of ownership) and an estimate of ROI from obtaining an EMI license, taking into account the alternative: working through partner providers or the PI model.

How to reduce the risk of refusal by the regulator

The regulator doesn’t want to stop you from operating. Its job is to ensure you operate safely. It’s important to remember that.

In COREDO’s experience, I see several factors that dramatically reduce the risk of refusal:

  1. Early dialogue and transparency
    • It’s easier to explain a complex element of the model at an early stage than to defend it after the official submission.
  2. Consistency of documents
    • The business plan, policies, IT descriptions, governance structure, and partner agreements should be logically consistent. The regulator quickly spots inconsistencies.
  3. Realism
    • Overly aggressive growth plans that are not backed by capital, team, and technology raise doubts. At COREDO we often temper expectations and rebuild the financial model.
  4. Readiness for oversight
    • Regulatory oversight (on-site and off-site inspections, regular reports, audits) is not a “punishment”, but a normal part of life for a licensed company. It’s important to set up processes in advance, rather than reacting after the fact.

When it’s better to work with a partner instead of obtaining an EMI license

There are scenarios in which I honestly recommend not rushing to obtain a license:

  • the product hasn’t yet achieved market fit;
  • unit economics are unstable;
  • the team is not ready to support full compliance, risk, and IT operations at the level expected of a licensee.

In such cases it makes sense to:

  • start via a partner payment provider;
  • simultaneously build your own infrastructure and prepare documentation;
  • move to an actual EMI license when the business model and team have “matured”.

COREDO’s role here is not to sell a licensing service, but to help see the entire path: from an MVP to a fully licensed institution, with minimal regulatory and operational risks.

How to open an EMI structure with COREDO

During COREDO’s work as an international consulting partner for businesses I have become convinced: a successful EMI licensing project is always a synergy of lawyers, financiers, IT experts and AML specialists.

In practice, the COREDO team:

  • analyzes the business model and helps choose a country where EMI regulatory risks in different jurisdictions align with your risk appetite;
  • structures the legal entity (or group), builds a clear ownership structure and substance;
  • prepares the complete documentation package for licensing: from the business plan and risk policy to AML/KYC procedures and IT descriptions;
  • supports dialogue with the regulator, helps respond promptly to requests and adjust the model;
  • sets up ongoing support: AML consulting, legal support, interaction with auditors, updating policies for regulatory changes.

My personal view is simple: having your own EMI license for an international fintech project is an investment in control over the product, margins and the pace of development. But only if you are prepared for serious, systematic work on regulatory, IT and operational risks.

If you are already thinking about which country is best to obtain an EMI license in, it means you are at the right stage of development. It’s important to turn this question from abstract to concrete: tailored to your business model, your team and your planning horizon. It is in this format that my team and I at COREDO are accustomed to working with clients for whom a license is not a goal, but a tool for long-term growth.

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