Crypto licence Switzerland
The authorisation map (SRO membership or a FINMA licence) that a classified token issuance plugs into.
Crypto licenceBefore a token generation event, one question governs everything downstream: is your token a security? A written FINMA classification (payment, utility or asset token) settles it in advance, fixing which laws apply to the offering. We analyse the token against FINMA’s taxonomy, secure the ruling before issuance, and build the launch on confirmed ground rather than on hope.
Classification drives the prospectus, the AML setup and who you can sell to.
A FINMA token classification ruling is a written confirmation, obtained before issuance, of how the regulator views your token. Using its taxonomy, set out in FINMA’s ICO guidelines, it assesses whether the token is a payment, utility or asset token, and crucially whether it is a security. That single answer determines the prospectus, the marketing, who you can sell to, the anti-money-laundering setup and any authorisation the project needs.
Get the classification wrong and everything built on it (the offering, the AML framework, the authorisation) is built on the wrong basis. The ruling is the foundation the rest of the launch stands on.
FINMA sorts tokens by the rights they confer, not by their label. The dividing line that matters is whether the token is a security, because that is what brings the heavy obligations.
| Category | What it is | A security? |
|---|---|---|
| Payment token | Pure means of payment, no further claim | No (but AML applies) |
| Utility token | Digital access to a service, usable at issuance | Generally no |
| Asset token | Debt/equity claim, profit share, underlying | Yes |
| Hybrid | Combines features | If asset features present, yes |
The traps live in the gaps: a “utility” token sold before the service exists can be an asset token; a token marketed as a means of payment can carry an investment claim that makes it a security. The ruling examines what the token actually does, which is why a confident label is no substitute for it.
Classification turns on rights and timing, not on the white paper’s vocabulary. Four tokens that look adjacent and land in different places.
If holders vote and share in protocol revenue or a treasury, the revenue entitlement is an investment claim: an asset token, treated as a security, with the prospectus and disclosure that follows. Strip the economic entitlement and it can fall back to utility; that restructuring choice is exactly what the ruling stage tests.
A token that will one day unlock a service, but is sold to fund building it, is generally not yet a usable utility token. Sold for future functionality and price appreciation, it carries investment character at issuance and is assessed as an asset token, the most common misclassification we unwind.
A redeemable claim on the issuer for a fixed amount is not a payment token in the simple sense: the redemption right usually engages the deposit concept, and depending on the reserve, fund rules. The token taxonomy is only the first lens; the stablecoin analysis runs alongside it.
A token spendable only inside a closed application, with no claim on the issuer and no resale promise, is the cleanest utility case, though AML duties can still apply once it becomes exchangeable for value. Even here the ruling documents the conclusion rather than assuming it.
The work is in the submission, not the waiting. A request that answers FINMA’s questions in advance moves faster and lands cleaner.
Mapping the token’s rights, mechanics and timing against the taxonomy, and identifying which category it falls into, and whether it can be structured into another.
Where the desired category is achievable, adjusting the token’s features and the offering so the classification lands where the project needs it.
Preparing and submitting the request (token mechanics, white paper, legal analysis) built to pre-empt the regulator’s questions.
Managing FINMA’s queries through to the written classification you can rely on for the issuance.
The offering structured on the classification (prospectus or exemption, AML setup, vehicle and any authorisation) so the ruling becomes a launch.
The cost tracks the token’s complexity: a clean payment or utility token is lighter to classify than a hybrid with investment features, and an asset-token issuance carries the further cost of the securities-law compliance that follows. The classification request itself is one line item; the issuance it enables is another.
We scope and quote against the specific token and offering. Pricing is on request, and the ruling is, reliably, the cheapest part of getting an issuance wrong by skipping it.
Discuss your tokenA classification FINMA can act on needs the token described as it really is:
The most expensive mistake we see is a project that calls its token a “utility token” in the white paper, markets it to investors expecting a return, and assumes the label settles the legal treatment. It does not. FINMA looks through to the rights and the economic reality, and a token that behaves like an investment is an asset token, a security, whatever it is named. Worse, the realisation usually arrives after issuance, with investors already holding. Classify before you issue, structure the token to match the category you actually want, and the label and the law agree.
A classification is only useful if it leads to a compliant issuance. We do both, the ruling and the launch built on it, which is where token projects most often come unstuck.
A ruling request that answers the regulator’s concerns before they are raised, so the classification lands cleanly rather than dragging through rounds of queries.
Where the law allows, the token and offering shaped so the classification lands where the project needs, not accepted as it first appears.
The prospectus or exemption, AML framework, vehicle and authorisation built on the classification, so the ruling turns into a launch that holds.
The authorisation map (SRO membership or a FINMA licence) that a classified token issuance plugs into.
Crypto licenceThe distinct, more complex case of a fiat-referenced token — deposit, collective investment or the incoming payment instrument regime.
Stablecoin issuanceThe anti-money-laundering framework a payment-token issuance and any intermediary activity must run.
VASP AMLTell us what the token does. A partner classifies it against FINMA's taxonomy, secures the ruling before issuance, and structures the offering on settled ground.