Estrella facilitates acquisitions of Latvian Payment Institutions (PI) — Financial and Capital Market Commission (FCMC) authorised entities with full PSD2 scope and EU-wide passporting from a cost-efficient Baltic jurisdiction.
A Latvian Payment Institution license is issued by the Latvian Financial and Capital Market Commission (Finanšu un kapitāla tirgus komisija, FCMC) — the country’s integrated financial sector regulator — under Latvian payment services legislation implementing the EU’s revised Payment Services Directive (PSD2).
Latvian PIs are authorised to provide all eight categories of payment services under PSD2. Latvian authorisation provides full EU passporting across all 27 EU member states and the broader EEA. As a Eurozone member, Latvia uses the euro and is fully integrated into European Central Bank payment infrastructure.
Latvia offers a particularly attractive cost-benefit balance for EU payment operations — operational costs are significantly lower than Western European jurisdictions, while the FCMC provides EU-equivalent regulatory standing. Latvia substantially upgraded its supervisory framework after 2019 in response to international AML reform pressures, and modern Latvian PIs operate at enhanced compliance standards.
Fresh FCMC Payment Institution authorisation typically takes 6–12 months, requiring documentation across business plan, capital arrangements, governance, IT and operational risk, AML/CFT (with particular emphasis post-2019), and demonstrated operational readiness.
Acquiring an FCMC-authorised PI bypasses this timeline and provides immediate EU operational capability with full passporting and Eurozone integration. Latvia’s combination of EU regulatory standing, Eurozone membership, and cost-efficient operations makes Latvian PIs particularly attractive for operators seeking premium EU access at non-premium pricing.
Pre-licensed Latvian PIs typically come with established FCMC relationships, accepted compliance frameworks, and Baltic or pan-European banking arrangements. Modern Latvian PIs benefit from the country’s post-2019 enhanced AML standards — which, while requiring rigorous compliance, also enhance entity credibility with international banking partners.
Latvian PIs are regulated under the Law on Payment Services and Electronic Money and Latvian AML/CFT legislation (substantially revised post-2019), supervised by the Financial and Capital Market Commission (FCMC). The framework implements EU PSD2 along with related EBA technical standards.
Key obligations include initial own-funds requirements per PSD2 (€20,000 to €125,000+ depending on services), client fund safeguarding via segregated accounts at qualifying credit institutions, comprehensive AML/CFT compliance under Latvia’s enhanced post-2019 framework, customer due diligence including enhanced measures for high-risk relationships, ongoing transaction monitoring with sophisticated detection scenarios, suspicious activity reporting to the Latvian Financial Intelligence Service (FID), regular regulatory reporting through FCMC systems, governance arrangements meeting FCMC expectations including qualified senior management subject to fit-and-proper assessment, and operational and security risk management aligned with EBA technical standards.
Latvia’s post-2019 AML reforms imposed enhanced supervisory standards reflecting international scrutiny of the Baltic banking sector. While this means rigorous compliance requirements, it also means Latvian-licensed entities benefit from enhanced credibility with international banking partners.
Estrella maintains relationships with FCMC-authorised Latvian Payment Institutions. Available opportunities include established PIs with active customer books and proven banking relationships, mid-stage PIs with strong infrastructure, and clean PIs with full authorisation suitable for new branding.
Each acquisition is subject to comprehensive due diligence: FCMC authorisation status and any historical supervisory matters, capital and own-funds compliance, safeguarding arrangements, AML/CFT framework (especially given Latvia’s post-2019 enhanced standards), banking and counterparty relationships, and corporate, tax, and financial history. FCMC qualifying-shareholder approval is required for ownership changes — Estrella manages this with Latvian regulatory counsel.
For current availability and pricing, please contact our acquisitions team.
Latvian PI acquisitions typically take 4–6 months. The corporate transfer can complete in weeks, with FCMC qualifying-shareholder approval typically processed in 60–90 days from a complete notification.
Yes, fully. FCMC authorisation provides full EU passporting rights enabling the entity to serve customers across all 27 EU member states and the EEA.
Very rigorous. Latvia substantially tightened AML/CFT supervision after 2019 in response to international pressure on the Baltic banking sector. Modern Latvian PIs operate under enhanced standards covering KYC, transaction monitoring, sanctions screening, and reporting. While this means significant compliance investment, it also enhances entity credibility with international banking partners.
All three Baltic states offer EU PI authorisation. Estonia is most digitally advanced with e-Residency support. Lithuania has the deepest fintech ecosystem and largest concentration of licensed PIs. Latvia offers cost-efficient operations with FCMC supervisory standards. Choice depends on specific operational priorities and target markets.
Latvian PIs are competitively priced compared to Western European EU jurisdictions, reflecting Latvia’s lower operating costs while maintaining full EU regulatory standing. Pricing varies based on operational history, banking relationships, and any active customer book.
Contact Estrella to explore available FCMC-authorised Payment Institutions in Latvia. Our team coordinates with Latvian regulatory counsel for the full acquisition process.
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