FINMA & Financial Licensing

How FINMA authorisation works: steps and timeline

FINMA authorisation runs through five stages: scope the correct licence category, build the application file, satisfy fit-and-proper and the anti-money-laundering framework, carry the file through the supervisory dialogue, and receive approval — usually with conditions — before ongoing supervision begins. The minimum capital is set in law and is rarely what holds a file up. The two parts that bite are the fit-and-proper evidence for the people in charge and the AML section of the business plan. There is no fixed legal deadline. FINMA itself says the duration turns on the licence type, the quality of the application and the dialogue with the applicant. A clean, complete file is examined far faster than one sent back for missing evidence.

Scoping the licence category comes first

The first stage decides which FINMA licence the planned activity actually needs, because everything after it is built to that category's requirements. Get the scoping wrong and the file is built to the wrong standard. A portfolio manager who trades for own account on a commercial basis may in fact need a securities-firm licence. A crypto custody model that holds client assets on its balance sheet can fall under banking law. The activity, not the brand or the marketing, sets the category.

FINMA's authorisation overview lists the licence types and the act each sits under. Where the categorisation is genuinely uncertain, FINMA offers a preliminary-enquiry route: a structured question about whether and how the model is subordinate to financial-market law, answered before any full application. Using it early is cheaper than building a file to the wrong category and rebuilding it later. The licence types and the statutes that govern them are mapped in our guide to FINMA, Switzerland's financial market regulator.

The application file is the centre of gravity

The application file is the document set FINMA examines to decide whether to grant the licence, and its weight scales with the category. A FinIA portfolio manager files less than a bank, but the spine is the same. Across categories the file typically contains:

  • a business plan describing the model, the client base and the services, with financial projections, usually over three years;
  • the organisation: governance, the board, the management, reporting lines, internal control and, above a size threshold, an independent risk and compliance function;
  • evidence of capital meeting the category minimum, fully paid up;
  • fit-and-proper documentation for every manager, board member and qualified shareholder;
  • the anti-money-laundering framework under the Anti-Money Laundering Act;
  • the risk-management and internal-control system, sized to the business; and
  • the audit arrangement: the licensed audit firm, or the Supervisory Organisation for portfolio managers and trustees.

The capital line is the one most applicants worry about and the one that causes the least trouble. It is a published figure. You either hold it or you raise it. The numbers below are fixed in the Financial Institutions Act and the sector acts; they are statutory minimums, never a matter for negotiation with FINMA.

Indicative minimum capital by licence category, as of June 2026. Figures are fully paid-up minimums set in law; sector acts may add further capital-adequacy and own-funds requirements.
LicenceLegal basisMinimum capital
Portfolio manager / trusteeFinancial Institutions Act (FinIA, SR 954.1)CHF 100,000, fully paid up
Securities firmFinancial Institutions Act (FinIA, SR 954.1)At least CHF 1.5 million
BankBanking Act (BankA, SR 952.0)At least CHF 10 million
Fintech (deposit) licenceBanking Act, art. 1bLower regime; public deposits capped at CHF 100 million, no interest, not invested

How the capital, the qualified-manager rules and the Supervisory Organisation route fit together for the most common licence is set out in our service page on the Swiss asset manager licence.

Fit-and-proper and AML are the parts that bite

Fit-and-proper and the anti-money-laundering framework are the two sections that most often decide how long a file takes. Both depend on third parties and on FINMA's scrutiny of substance rather than form, which is why neither can be rushed at the end.

Fit-and-proper is FINMA's judgement that the people running the institution offer a guarantee of irreproachable business conduct and are qualified for their roles, and that the owners do the same. It reaches the management, the board and the qualified shareholders. The evidence is concrete: curricula vitae, references, extracts from the criminal record and the debt-enforcement register, regulatory questionnaires, and frequently interviews. A thin CV, an unexplained gap, or a manager who cannot show the relevant experience for the role will all draw questions. Foreign managers add a step, because FINMA may seek information from the supervisory authority in their home country, and that response sits outside the applicant's control.

The AML framework has to match the actual business model and cannot be lifted from a template. It sets out how the firm identifies clients and beneficial owners, how it classifies and monitors risk, what triggers enhanced due diligence, how it screens against sanctions, and who the responsible AML officer is. FINMA reads it against the clients the business plan describes. A payments model, a crypto model and a classic portfolio-management model each carry different money-laundering risk, and the framework has to show that the firm has understood its own. In the authorisation matters we run, the part that bites is almost always the fit-and-proper evidence and the AML section, rarely the capital threshold, which is the simplest condition to meet.

The supervisory dialogue runs in rounds

The supervisory dialogue is the back-and-forth between FINMA and the applicant after the file is filed, and it is where most of the elapsed time goes. FINMA assigns a named case handler, confirms what is still outstanding, examines the documents, and comes back with questions, corrections and requests for further evidence. This happens in rounds. A clean file might close in a couple of rounds; a file with gaps in governance, capital evidence or AML design will run longer as each round resolves one layer and exposes the next.

For portfolio managers and trustees the dialogue runs through the firm's Supervisory Organisation as well as FINMA: the SO reviews much of the file before and alongside FINMA, which keeps the final authorisation decision. FINMA describes its own licensing process for portfolio managers and trustees on its site. For banks and securities firms the path is set out under first-time licensing, and it is heavier at every stage. The quality of the original file is the single biggest lever an applicant holds over the length of the dialogue.

Approval usually comes with conditions, then supervision begins

Approval is rarely a single clean yes. FINMA can grant the authorisation subject to conditions and requirements: confirm a key hire, finalise a named policy, top up capital, or close a specific gap before the licence takes effect. The ruling lists what must be in place. Once those conditions are met the licence is effective, and the firm carries its ongoing obligations from that day.

Ongoing supervision is the standing relationship. The firm undergoes a periodic regulatory audit by a licensed audit firm, or, for portfolio managers and trustees, day-to-day supervision by its Supervisory Organisation, with FINMA above it. It reports through FINMA's electronic platform, pays an annual supervisory levy scaled to its category, and must notify or seek fresh approval for material changes such as new owners, managers or business lines before they happen rather than afterwards. A licence is a continuing condition the firm has to keep satisfying. Carrying that standing compliance load is what our ongoing compliance retainer is built for.

A realistic timeline, without false precision

There is no statutory deadline for a FINMA decision, and FINMA does not publish a guaranteed turnaround. What it does say is plain: the duration depends on the licence type, the quality and complexity of the application, and the dialogue with the applicant. For securities firms it adds that the time needed for foreign supervisory authorities to respond also affects the length. The honest planning answer is a range, scaled to category and to how clean the file is on the day it is filed.

Rough planning ranges for elapsed time to a FINMA decision, as of June 2026. These are planning estimates, not FINMA commitments; the actual time turns on file quality and the supervisory dialogue.
LicenceRough elapsed timeWhat stretches it
Portfolio manager / trusteeSeveral monthsFit-and-proper for managers; AML design; SO review rounds
Securities firmAround a yearCapital and own-funds evidence; foreign-authority responses; governance depth
BankA year or moreFull prudential file; risk and capital model; intensive direct review

One published figure is narrower and worth not over-reading. For fintech subordination enquiries, the question of whether a model needs a licence at all rather than a full application, FINMA reported an average processing time of 25 days in 2024, down from 60 days in 2022. That measures preliminary enquiries, and it does not transfer to a full bank or portfolio-manager authorisation. Read it as evidence that a focused, well-framed question is answered quickly, and not as a turnaround you can expect for a full licence.

What FINMA authorisation does not do

A FINMA licence is narrower than it is often assumed to be, and three limits matter most. It does not certify that the business will succeed: the authorisation confirms capital, organisation, fit-and-proper management and AML controls, and says nothing about whether the strategy is sound or the returns real. It does not let you start before approval: the licensed activity may not begin until FINMA grants the licence, and operating without it is itself an offence under the Financial Market Supervision Act that can land an operator on the warning list. And it does not end the obligations; it starts them, because the conditions in the licence run for as long as the firm holds it.

There is also a category for whom full authorisation is the wrong path. A financial intermediary whose activity sits below the prudential threshold, including many fiduciaries, payment agents and smaller crypto brokers, does not apply to FINMA for a licence at all. It affiliates to a self-regulatory organisation for AML supervision instead. If the model fits there, building a full FINMA application file is wasted effort and wasted capital. Which side of the line a business falls on is the question to settle first, and it is covered in our service pages on FINMA authorisation and across our FINMA and financial licensing guides.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

01How long does FINMA authorisation take?
There is no fixed statutory deadline. FINMA states that the duration depends on the licence type, the quality and complexity of the application and the dialogue with the applicant. A complete, well-prepared file is examined faster than one returned for missing evidence. As a rough planning guide: a portfolio-manager licence often runs several months; a bank or securities-firm licence usually a year or more. For fintech subordination enquiries, which only ask whether a model needs a licence at all, FINMA reported an average processing time of 25 days in 2024, down from 60 days in 2022. That figure measures preliminary enquiries and does not apply to a full licence procedure.
02What documents go into a FINMA application file?
A business plan with three-year financial projections, the organisational and governance description, evidence of the required minimum capital, fit-and-proper documentation for every proposed manager and board member, the anti-money-laundering framework, the risk-management and internal-control system, and the audit arrangement. The exact list scales with the licence category. Banks and securities firms file far more than a portfolio manager.
03What is fit-and-proper in a FINMA procedure?
Fit-and-proper is FINMA's assessment that the people running the institution offer a guarantee of irreproachable business conduct, are professionally qualified for their role, and that the firm is owned by people who do the same. It covers managers, the board and qualified shareholders. In practice it means CVs, references, criminal-record and debt-enforcement extracts, regulatory questionnaires and, often, interviews. It is one of the two parts that most often slows a file down.
04How much capital does FINMA require?
Capital depends entirely on the licence category. A FinIA portfolio manager needs fully paid-up minimum capital of CHF 100,000. A securities firm needs at least CHF 1.5 million. A bank needs at least CHF 10 million. Funds, insurers and market infrastructures follow their own sector acts. The capital figure is published in law, so it is rarely the part of the file that causes delay.
05What is the supervisory dialogue?
The supervisory dialogue is the exchange of questions and answers between FINMA and the applicant after the file is submitted. FINMA assigns a case handler, reviews the documents, and asks for clarifications, corrections or additional evidence in successive rounds. Most procedures involve several rounds. The cleaner the file, the fewer rounds and the shorter the dialogue.
06Do I need to choose the licence category before applying?
Yes. The first decision is which licence the planned activity actually requires, because the whole file is built to the requirements of that category. Getting the scoping wrong is expensive: a portfolio manager who actually trades for own account on a commercial basis may need a securities-firm licence instead, and a crypto custody model can fall under banking law. FINMA offers a preliminary-enquiry route to confirm the correct categorisation before a full application.
07Can I operate while my FINMA application is pending?
No, not for the licensed activity. A bank, securities firm, fund institution or portfolio manager may not carry out the activity that needs a licence until FINMA has granted it. Operating without the required authorisation is itself an offence and can trigger enforcement and the warning list. Preparatory steps such as incorporating the company, hiring and building systems are allowed; taking client money or managing client assets under the regime is not.
08Does FINMA grant the licence with conditions?
Often, yes. FINMA can issue the authorisation subject to conditions and requirements, for example confirming a key hire, finalising a policy, or topping up capital before the licence becomes effective. Approval is rarely a single clean yes; it is usually a ruling that lists what must be in place. The licence then carries ongoing obligations the firm must keep meeting for as long as it holds it.
09What happens after FINMA grants the licence?
Ongoing supervision begins. The firm undergoes a periodic regulatory audit by a licensed audit firm, or, for portfolio managers and trustees, day-to-day supervision by a FINMA-authorised Supervisory Organisation. It reports through FINMA's electronic platform, pays an annual supervisory levy scaled to its category, and must notify or seek fresh approval for material changes such as new owners, managers or business lines before they happen.
10Which part of a FINMA application usually takes longest?
Fit-and-proper evidence for the proposed managers and board, and the anti-money-laundering section of the business plan. These depend on third-party documents, drafting that matches the actual business model, and FINMA's scrutiny of the people and the AML design. The minimum capital, by contrast, is a published figure and is usually the simplest condition to satisfy.
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FINMA & Financial Licensing

FINMA

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