Mongolia has built its own legal framework for crypto exchanges with the Law on Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASP Law, also referred to as the VPSP Law), passed in December 2021 and entered into force in February 2022. Registration and supervision fall to the Financial Regulatory Commission (FRC), Mongolia’s financial markets regulator. At the same time, the central bank, the Bank of Mongolia (Mongolbank), keeps repeating one point: cryptocurrencies are not legal tender in Mongolia.
The core principle is simple: the FRC registers trading platforms (exchanges), not the coins or tokens traded on them. Any company that wants to offer virtual asset services in Mongolia – running a trading platform, custody, or transfer of crypto assets – must register with the FRC and meet requirements on anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing (AML/CFT), customer identification (KYC), and risk disclosure to users.
The law traces back to a Financial Action Task Force (FATF) recommendation. Since 2018, FATF Recommendation 15 has explicitly covered virtual assets and virtual asset service providers under its global AML standards. Mongolia had been placed on an FATF grey list over AML deficiencies back in 2019 and was removed in 2020, but committed to keep implementing FATF standards going forward. The VASP Law is part of that commitment.
Oversight is split between two authorities:
The FRC began formally registering providers in June 2022. Exchanges already operating beforehand had to register within a transition period. Roughly a dozen providers are now registered with the FRC, offering trading in several hundred recognized virtual assets; industry sources put registered users at over 900,000 by mid-2023.
One common misunderstanding worth clearing up: FRC registration is not an approval or vetting of individual cryptocurrencies. What gets reviewed and registered is the company operating the trading platform – not the specific coin or token traded on it. Token issuers generally don’t need separate government approval under current law, unless the token qualifies as a security token, in which case it falls under the Securities Market Law and FRC oversight as a security.
Regardless of how exchanges are licensed, the Bank of Mongolia keeps reiterating its position: cryptocurrencies are not recognized as legal tender in Mongolia, and are not treated as a means of payment under either the National Payment System Law or the Law on Conducting Settlement in National Currency. Trading Bitcoin, Ether or other crypto assets through a registered exchange is allowed – but using crypto as everyday payment is not officially sanctioned.
Mongolia is following a pattern seen in several emerging markets with FATF obligations: rather than an outright ban or a hands-off approach, it licenses intermediaries while keeping a hard line on currency status. For investors, that means an FRC registration signals AML/KYC compliance by the exchange operator – it’s not a guarantee about the quality of any individual coin listed, and it’s not a government endorsement of crypto as money.
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