Crypto License in Australia requires more than choosing a popular jurisdiction. Crypto, virtual asset, exchange, custody, brokerage, and payment-related activities are assessed through the business model, client countries, AML/KYC controls, governance, source of funds, technology stack, and local regulatory perimeter. Bergers Legal can help structure the file before any application or registration step is taken.
What is Crypto License in Australia?
Crypto License in Australia usually refers to the authorization, registration, or compliance status required for businesses that provide virtual asset, exchange, custody, brokerage, payment, or related services in Australia. Requirements depend on the exact activity, client geography, AML/KYC controls, governance, and local regulator expectations.
Who this service is for
- Crypto exchanges, brokerages, OTC desks, custodians, wallet providers, and virtual asset service providers.
- Fintech or payment businesses adding digital asset services to an existing model.
- Founders comparing jurisdictions for licensing, substance, banking, and compliance workload.
- Groups preparing AML/KYC policies, risk assessments, transaction monitoring procedures, and governance documents.
- Businesses that need a regulator-ready explanation of their activity, clients, technology, and controls.
What problem this service helps solve
Crypto licensing problems often come from vague business models, weak AML documentation, unclear token or custody flows, unsupported banking assumptions, or choosing a jurisdiction before the regulatory perimeter is understood. A structured review helps align corporate setup, compliance controls, and application materials before external review begins.
How Bergers Legal can assist
- Reviewing the proposed business model, ownership structure, and target markets before documents are prepared.
- Identifying the documents, compliance policies, and corporate records that are usually expected for the case.
- Coordinating local counsel, registered agent, or filing support where local execution is required.
- Preparing or reviewing corporate, compliance, and application materials so they are consistent and regulator-ready.
- Guiding follow-up questions, corrections, and post-setup compliance steps without promising a final approval outcome.
Step-by-step process
- Initial consultation and crypto business model mapping.
- Regulatory perimeter and jurisdiction suitability review.
- Corporate structure, ownership, governance, and substance analysis.
- AML/KYC, risk assessment, compliance, and operational document preparation.
- Application, registration, or local filing support where applicable.
- Follow-up support for regulator questions, banking readiness, and ongoing compliance planning.
Documents and information usually required
- Detailed business model, services, target markets, client types, and transaction flows.
- Ownership chart, UBO information, director and senior manager profiles.
- AML/KYC policy, risk assessment, sanctions screening, and transaction monitoring approach.
- Technology, custody, wallet, security, outsourcing, and vendor information where relevant.
- Financial projections, source of funds, and operating budget where requested.
- Corporate documents, compliance officer details, and local substance information where required.
Estimated timeline
The timeline for crypto License in Australia depends on the regulatory route, document quality, corporate setup, compliance readiness, local service providers, and regulator or authority questions. A realistic timetable should be set only after the business model and required documentation are reviewed.
Costs and pricing factors
Costs usually depend on the jurisdiction, activity scope, corporate setup, local substance, compliance documentation, legal review depth, regulator or government fees, number of UBOs and managers, and whether ongoing compliance support is needed.
Risks and mistakes to avoid
- Choosing a jurisdiction before confirming the real operating model, client geography, and compliance burden.
- Submitting generic AML/KYC or corporate documents that do not match the actual activities of the business.
- Underestimating substance, governance, reporting, renewal, or ongoing compliance requirements.
- Starting bank, payment provider, or regulator discussions before the ownership and source-of-funds file is complete.
- Treating timelines and costs as fixed when they depend on third-party review, regulator questions, and document quality.
Detailed jurisdiction notes
Bergers Legal provides legal support for crypto businesses entering the Australian market, including registration with AUSTRAC as a Digital Currency Exchange (DCE), AML/CTF structuring, and ongoing compliance advisory. We assist companies in building legally sustainable operations aligned with Australian financial regulations.
Australia operates a strict compliance-based model for crypto businesses. Instead of issuing a traditional crypto license, the jurisdiction requires mandatory registration with AUSTRAC for entities providing digital currency exchange services.
Overview of crypto regulation in Australia
In Australia, businesses dealing with cryptocurrency—particularly exchange services between fiat and digital assets—must register as a Digital Currency Exchange (DCE) with AUSTRAC.
This framework is built around:
- mandatory registration rather than licensing
- strict AML/CTF compliance requirements
- continuous regulatory supervision
- integration with financial intelligence monitoring systems
Crypto assets are not prohibited and are widely used, but all service providers must operate within a controlled compliance environment.
What is AUSTRAC
AUSTRAC (Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre) is Australia’s financial intelligence authority responsible for monitoring financial activity and preventing financial crime.
Unlike traditional financial regulators, AUSTRAC does not issue licenses in the classical sense. Instead, it:
- registers digital currency exchange providers
- supervises AML/CTF compliance
- monitors financial transactions
- cooperates with law enforcement agencies
Since 2018, crypto exchanges operating in Australia must be registered with AUSTRAC before providing services.
Activities requiring AUSTRAC registration
Registration as a DCE is required for businesses that provide:
- exchange of cryptocurrency for fiat currency
- exchange of fiat currency for cryptocurrency
- operation of online crypto trading platforms
- OTC (over-the-counter) crypto trading services
- crypto ATM operations (cash-to-crypto and crypto-to-cash)
Any business facilitating conversion between digital assets and fiat falls within this requirement.
Key features of AUSTRAC DCE registration
- Regulator: AUSTRAC
- Legal form: registration (not a traditional license)
- Requirement: mandatory before operations
- Scope: crypto-to-fiat exchange services
- Compliance: strict AML/CTF obligations
- Supervision: ongoing and continuous
- Recognition: high international credibility
Advantages of operating in Australia
Australia is considered a highly reputable jurisdiction with a strong regulatory framework.
Key advantages
- High regulatory credibility
Strong international reputation and compliance alignment - Clear legal framework
Defined obligations for crypto businesses - Access to developed financial infrastructure
Established banking and financial ecosystem - Trust from partners and institutions
AUSTRAC registration increases credibility with counterparties - Mature compliance environment
Clear AML/CTF expectations and enforcement
Disadvantages and limitations
Key considerations
- High compliance burden
- Continuous reporting obligations
- Strict AML/CTF requirements
- Increased operational costs
- Regulatory scrutiny and audits
Australia is not suitable for businesses seeking low-regulation environments.
Requirements for AUSTRAC registration
Before applying, a company must establish a full compliance framework.
Core requirements
- registered legal entity
- defined business model and risk assessment
- AML/CTF program tailored to the business
- KYC procedures for customer identification
- transaction monitoring system
- internal controls for detecting suspicious activity
- appointment of a compliance officer
- staff training program
- documentation and reporting procedures
The AML/CTF program must be customized and aligned with the company’s operations.
How to obtain a crypto license in Australia
Although commonly referred to as a “crypto license,” the process is formally a registration procedure.
Step-by-step process
1. Business model assessment
Determine whether the activity qualifies as a digital currency exchange
2. Company setup
Register a legal entity and define operational structure
3. AML/CTF program development
Prepare internal compliance policies and risk management procedures
4. Implementation of compliance systems
Set up KYC, transaction monitoring, and reporting mechanisms
5. Submission to AUSTRAC
Apply for DCE registration with full documentation
6. Registration approval
Company is added to the AUSTRAC register and may begin operations
AML/CTF obligations
After registration, companies must continuously comply with regulatory requirements.
Key obligations
- ongoing maintenance of AML/CTF program
- customer identification and verification (KYC)
- monitoring of transactions
- reporting suspicious matters (SMR)
- reporting threshold transactions (TTR)
- maintaining records and documentation
- periodic updates of customer data
- internal audits and independent reviews
- continuous staff training
Post-registration compliance
AUSTRAC requires ongoing supervision and control.
Companies must:
- update internal policies when business changes
- maintain accurate records
- respond to regulatory requests
- undergo compliance reviews
- ensure operational transparency
Failure to comply may result in:
- financial penalties
- suspension of operations
- deregistration
- legal enforcement actions
Taxation crypto companies in Australia
Crypto taxation in Australia is well-defined and strictly enforced.
Key tax aspects
- crypto transactions are taxable events
- business income is subject to corporate tax
- capital gains tax may apply
- GST treatment depends on transaction type
- mining and trading profits are taxable
- detailed reporting is required
Tax obligations depend on the nature of the activity and company structure.
Banking and operational considerations
Operating in Australia requires strong compliance readiness.
Banks typically require:
- clear business model
- full AML/CTF framework
- transparent ownership structure
- transaction monitoring capabilities
- documented source of funds
Well-prepared companies have better access to financial services.
Conclusion
Australia provides a highly regulated and credible environment for crypto businesses. While entry requires significant compliance preparation, AUSTRAC registration offers strong legal standing and international recognition.
This jurisdiction is best suited for companies aiming for long-term, compliant operations with access to institutional partners.
Bergers Legal supports clients through the entire process, from regulatory analysis and AML/CTF program development to AUSTRAC registration and ongoing compliance management.
Next steps
If you are considering Crypto License in Australia, share the business model, ownership structure, target markets, and current documents with Bergers Legal. The team can review the case, identify missing information, and outline practical next steps by Telegram, WhatsApp, email, or consultation request.






