Token issuance — where to incorporate.
A side-by-side comparison of the seven jurisdictions that matter for token launches in 2026. Costs in USD, licensing regimes, exchange acceptance, and the five places founders most often save or burn six figures.
The decision in one paragraph
For a typical token launch in 2026, the default issuer jurisdiction is the British Virgin Islands or the Cayman Islands, governed from above by a Cayman Foundation Company. For tokens with strong payment-instrument characteristics (stablecoins, MiCA-touching e-money tokens), Liechtenstein under the TVTG framework is the cleanest path. For tokens regulated as Investment Tokens or genuine securities, ADGM FSRA in Abu Dhabi or DIFC DFSA in Dubai are the only credible UAE pathways. For DAOs whose governance is genuinely on-chain, a Marshall Islands or Wyoming DAO LLC sits inside the structure to wrap the on-chain vote.
The seven jurisdictions worth considering
| Jurisdiction | Issuer cost Y1 | Issuance regime | Tier 1 exchange acceptance |
|---|---|---|---|
| BVI | USD 4,200 | VASP Act 2022; issuance not licensed when isolated | Universal |
| Cayman | USD 5,000–16,500 (Foundation) | Virtual Asset Service Providers Act; standalone issuance carved out | Universal |
| Liechtenstein | USD 18,000 | TVTG (Blockchain Act 2020) — token-class-specific licence | Strong (esp. payment tokens) |
| Switzerland | USD 26,500 | FINMA Guidelines (utility / payment / asset) | Strong |
| ADGM (UAE) | USD 26,500 | FSRA notification regime (from June 2025) | Growing |
| Marshall Islands | USD 12,000 (DAO LLC) | DAO LLC Act 2022 — governance wrapper, not licensed issuer | Strong for DAO tokens |
| Singapore | USD 3,500 Pte Ltd + licence cost | Payment Services Act + Securities and Futures Act | Universal but licence-heavy |
How to choose
By token type
- Utility tokens (governance, access, in-protocol payment) — BVI or Cayman. Lowest cost, fastest, cleanest if your token is genuinely consumed within the protocol.
- Payment / e-money tokens / stablecoins — Liechtenstein TVTG, or Singapore MAS DPT licence, or Dubai VARA "VA Issuance" + stablecoin provisions. EU users mean MiCA scope; plan for ART/EMT classification.
- Security tokens / Investment Tokens — ADGM FSRA, DIFC DFSA, Liechtenstein TVTG (asset class), or Switzerland under FINMA asset-token guidance. These are licence-based; expect 6–12 months and USD 250k+ to launch.
- DAO governance tokens — Marshall Islands DAO LLC as governance wrapper, sitting beside a BVI or Cayman Issuer for the sale-event mechanics.
- NFT collections — generally not securities, so the issuer can be a regular UAE Free Zone (IFZA / DMCC) with a Cayman SPC holding royalty streams. See our NFT legal structure guide.
By exchange listing target
Different exchanges have different internal lists. Based on listings we have supported:
- Binance, OKX, Bybit, KuCoin, Bitget, Gate.io — accept BVI, Cayman (Foundation or exempted), Singapore, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Marshall Islands DAO LLC, ADGM. Tend to decline US-domiciled issuers for non-US tokens.
- Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, Bitstamp — accept the same plus US LLC / C-Corp where the token has a registered offering exemption (Reg D, Reg S, Reg A+). More conservative on Marshall Islands; sometimes require Cayman or Switzerland for institutional tokens.
- Uniswap, decentralised venues — no formal acceptance list, but the issuer's jurisdiction still matters for the listing project team's own KYC.
By tax residency of the team
Where your team is tax-resident does not constrain where the issuer can be, but it does constrain how the structure must be wired. Most operating teams sit in UAE (0% personal income tax via Free Zone residency), Singapore (EP/EntrePass), Switzerland (lump-sum or ordinary tax) or Portugal (NHR regime through 2024, post-NHR after). The issuer-Foundation-OpCo separation must be clean enough that the team's residence jurisdiction does not tax the offshore issuer on a "place of effective management" doctrine.
The five points where founders most often save or burn USD 100k+
- Picking the wrong issuer for a token that will end up classified as a security. A retroactive reclassification can cost USD 1m+ in SEC settlements and exchange delistings. Get the Howey test right before issuance.
- Skipping the Foundation and issuing directly from a founder-owned company. The cap-table tax leakage and the loss of regulatory cleanliness easily exceeds the USD 30k saved on Foundation set-up.
- Issuing from Delaware because Stripe Atlas was easy. Costs you most Tier 1 exchange listings and creates a US tax nexus for the entire token treasury.
- Choosing Liechtenstein TVTG for a utility token. Pays for licensing you do not need. BVI or Cayman would do the same job for one fifth the cost.
- Forgetting MiCA scope. If your token will be marketed to EU users from December 2024, MiCA classification applies. Liechtenstein, EU MS licensing, or strict EU-exclusion in the offering terms — pick one before TGE, not after.
What ArxSetup files
For each token-issuance engagement we provide a written jurisdiction memorandum within 5 business days of the initial enquiry, comparing two or three candidate jurisdictions against your specific token type, target exchanges, team residencies, and offering size. The memo is fixed-fee USD 6,500 and is creditable in full against any subsequent formation engagement. From engagement to TGE-ready: 10–14 weeks for the standard Cayman Foundation + BVI Issuer architecture; 16–24 weeks for Liechtenstein TVTG or ADGM FSRA.