What Is a VASP? Virtual Asset Service Provider Definition
Complete definition of Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) — FATF definition, licensing requirements, AML/CFT obligations, and jurisdictional variations.
What Is a VASP?
A Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) is a term defined by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) to describe any natural or legal person that conducts one or more specified activities involving virtual assets on behalf of or for the benefit of another person. The FATF definition of VASP encompasses: exchange between virtual assets and fiat currencies; exchange between forms of virtual assets; transfer of virtual assets; safekeeping and/or administration of virtual assets; and participation in financial services related to virtual asset offerings.
Key Points
Understanding this term is essential for compliance officers, attorneys, and institutional investors navigating the tokenization regulatory landscape. Here are the key aspects:
Regulatory significance. This concept has direct implications for how tokenized assets are classified, regulated, and traded across jurisdictions. Regulatory bodies worldwide reference this term in their frameworks, guidance documents, and enforcement actions.
Institutional application. For institutional participants in tokenization, understanding this concept is not optional — it is a prerequisite for compliance, risk management, and strategic decision-making. Misunderstanding or ignoring this concept can result in regulatory violations, financial penalties, and reputational damage.
Cross-jurisdictional relevance. While specific implementations vary by jurisdiction, the underlying concept is recognized globally. The FATF, IOSCO, FSB, and other international standard-setting bodies reference this concept in their guidance and recommendations.
Practical Implications
The practical implications of this concept for institutional tokenization participants include:
- Compliance obligations — Understanding how this concept translates into specific compliance requirements in each relevant jurisdiction
- Risk assessment — Evaluating the risks associated with this concept and implementing appropriate mitigation measures
- Operational procedures — Designing operational workflows that address the requirements and constraints implied by this concept
- Documentation — Maintaining adequate documentation demonstrating compliance with requirements related to this concept
- Ongoing monitoring — Staying current with regulatory developments that may change how this concept is applied or interpreted
Related Concepts
For additional context, see our related glossary entries, regulatory guides, and entity profiles. The complete glossary provides definitions for all key terms in tokenization regulation.
Further Reading
- Definitive Guide to Tokenization Regulation
- US Federal Tokenization Policy
- EU MiCA Regulation
- Global Policy Section
- 50 Questions FAQ
Return to Glossary Index for all definitions. For institutional guidance, see our Guides section.