MSB vs VASP vs CASP Which Crypto License Is Right for You?

A practical comparison of crypto-asset service licensing categories

Crypto-asset operators face a complex licensing landscape — MSB (North American framework with virtual currency permissions), VASP (national crypto frameworks across multiple jurisdictions), and CASP (the EU’s harmonized MiCA regime). This guide compares all three for buyers evaluating crypto company acquisitions.

At a Glance

Short answer: If you target US/Canadian customers — buy an MSB (with virtual currency permissions). If you want EU-wide crypto services with passporting — buy a CASP (or a transitioning EU VASP). If you want offshore or non-EU jurisdictions (Seychelles, Georgia, Panama) — buy a national VASP. Many global operators acquire multiple to cover all geographies.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Dimension MSB (North America) VASP (national) CASP (EU MiCA)
GeographyUSA + CanadaMultiple national (Czech, Lithuania, Georgia, Seychelles, Panama, Poland)All 27 EU member states (single licence, full passporting)
RegulatorFINTRAC (Canada) / FinCEN + states (USA)National regulator per jurisdictionNational regulator per jurisdiction (under harmonized MiCA)
Crypto activities coveredExchange, custody, transfer, virtual currency dealingExchange, custody, transfer, advisory (varies by jurisdiction)Exchange, custody, transfer, advisory, portfolio management, placement (harmonised)
PassportingUSA: federal + state; Canada: nationwideNational only (no cross-border passporting)Full EU passporting
Capital requirementsNo federal minimum; state surety bonds in USAVaries by jurisdiction (USD 50k–500k typical)€50k–€150k by service category
Fresh licensing time3–6 months Canada; 12–24 months US multi-state3–8 months by jurisdiction6–12 months
Acquisition time4–12 weeks6–10 weeks4–6 months (with EU regulator approval)
Status under EU MiCAN/A (non-EU)EU VASPs transitioning to CASP; non-EU VASPs unaffectedActive EU regime since Dec 2024
Best target marketNorth American customersOffshore / non-EU global; specific national marketsEU and EEA institutional and retail crypto customers

When to Choose Each Option

Choose MSB if you:

  • Target US or Canadian customers for crypto exchange, transfer, or remittance
  • Need to integrate with US banks, payment networks, or correspondent banking
  • Want fastest North American market entry (Canadian MSB acquisitions complete in weeks)
  • Operate fiat-on-ramp services for North American crypto users

Choose national VASP if you:

  • Want offshore or non-EU jurisdictions (Seychelles, Georgia, Panama)
  • Need cost-effective licensing without the full MiCA regulatory overhead
  • Operate in markets where local national regulation is sufficient
  • Are an EU operator wanting MiCA transitional advantages — buy an existing EU VASP and transition to CASP

Choose CASP if you:

  • Need full EU-wide passporting for crypto services across all 27 member states
  • Target EU institutional customers requiring MiCA-compliant counterparties
  • Provide custody, exchange, or trading platform services at scale
  • Build for long-term EU presence with the fully harmonised regulatory framework

Acquire multiple if you:

  • Operate globally and need licensed presence across multiple regulatory regimes
  • Serve North American + EU + offshore customer bases
  • Have institutional banking and partner relationships requiring jurisdiction-specific entities

Pricing & Acquisition Economics

Pricing varies dramatically across categories. Canadian MSBs are the most cost-effective crypto-permissioned entities. National VASPs in offshore jurisdictions (Seychelles, Vanuatu, Comoros) are competitively priced, while EU VASPs (Czech, Lithuanian) command premiums for MiCA transitional advantages. CASPs are the most premium-priced crypto licences reflecting the harmonised EU passporting and the regulatory burden of the MiCA regime. US MSBs with multi-state licensing are very expensive due to the cumulative cost of state-by-state authorisation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a CASP serve customers outside the EU?

Yes, CASPs may serve non-EU customers, though MiCA primarily governs EU-related activity. Operators serving non-EU customers may benefit from non-EU licences as well, depending on local regulatory requirements in customer jurisdictions.

Will EU VASPs need to convert to CASP?

Yes, eventually. MiCA introduced transitional provisions allowing existing EU VASPs to continue operating under national authorisation while preparing for full CASP licensing. Transition deadlines vary by EU member state but typically extend through 2025–2026. Acquiring an existing EU VASP provides MiCA transitional advantages over a fresh CASP application.

Are non-EU VASPs affected by MiCA?

Non-EU VASPs (Seychelles, Georgia, Panama) are not directly affected by MiCA — they continue under their national frameworks. However, non-EU VASPs cannot serve EU customers without obtaining EU authorisation (CASP). Many global operators maintain both non-EU VASP and EU CASP licences.

Can a US MSB serve EU crypto customers?

Generally no. EU customers require an EU-authorised counterparty (CASP or transitioning VASP). US MSBs may serve US customers and certain non-EU markets but should not actively solicit EU residents without EU authorisation.

What about the UK?

The UK has its own crypto-asset framework administered by the FCA (registration as crypto-asset business under MLRs). Post-Brexit the UK is not part of MiCA. UK crypto-asset registration is a separate licence category from EU CASP and from national VASPs in non-UK jurisdictions.

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