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If you are asking how to set up a stablecoin from Liechtenstein in 2026, the first decision you face is a legal one: does your token reference a single official currency such as the euro, making it an e-money token (EMT), or does it reference a basket of assets, making it an asset-referenced token (ART) under the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA)? That classification determines every obligation that follows, from FMA Liechtenstein authorisation requirements and reserve architecture to redemption rights and whitepaper disclosures.
With the scheduled 2026 MiCA review generating fresh stablecoin guidance from European supervisory authorities and euro-denominated stablecoin issuance accelerating across the EEA, Liechtenstein’s combination of a mature token-economy framework and EEA passporting rights makes it one of the most strategically compelling jurisdictions for compliant stablecoin issuance today.
The core compliance question for any prospective issuer is straightforward in principle: EMT or ART? Under MiCA, a token that purports to maintain a stable value by referencing a single official currency, for example, a EUR-pegged stablecoin, falls within the EMT definition. Any token that stabilises its value by referencing one or more other assets, rights or a combination thereof is classified as an ART. This binary classification governs the authorisation pathway, the prudential capital regime, the reserve segregation rules and the holder’s redemption rights.
For founding teams and compliance leads, the practical decision flow is concise. If the product is designed as a medium of exchange pegged one-to-one to a fiat currency, the EMT route applies and requires either an e-money institution licence or a credit institution licence. If the product references commodities, multiple currencies or any non-single-currency basket, the ART route applies and demands a bespoke MiCA authorisation. Both pathways run through FMA Liechtenstein as the competent national authority.
Industry observers expect the 2026 MiCA review to refine “significance” thresholds and cross-border supervisory cooperation, but the foundational EMT-versus-ART framework is settled law. Teams that begin the FMA pre-filing process now position themselves to launch before competitors still navigating regulatory uncertainty in other jurisdictions.
MiCA draws a clear line between e-money tokens and asset-referenced tokens. Understanding the legal definitions, reserve mechanics and supervisory thresholds is essential before any stablecoin issuance project advances to the application stage. The European Banking Authority (EBA) holds direct supervisory responsibility for tokens classified as “significant,” while the FMA supervises non-significant tokens issued from Liechtenstein.
| Feature | EMT (E-Money Token) | ART (Asset-Referenced Token) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal test | References a single official currency (e.g., EUR, USD, CHF) | References one or more assets, rights or a basket, anything other than a single official currency |
| Issuer licence required | E-money institution or credit institution licence | Bespoke MiCA ART authorisation (or credit institution licence) |
| Redemption right | Unconditional right to redeem at par value at any time; no fees beyond costs directly linked to the transaction | Redemption rights must be defined in the whitepaper; more structuring flexibility, but subject to prudential safeguards |
| Reserve rules | Full 1:1 backing in highly liquid assets; strict segregation and custody requirements | Reserve required, but multi-asset composition permitted; investment rules, concentration limits and stress-testing obligations apply |
| Significance thresholds | If outstanding value exceeds specified thresholds, EBA assumes direct supervision | Same significance framework applies; thresholds based on customer base, transaction volume and reserve size |
| Prudential own-funds requirement | Aligned with e-money institution own-funds rules | Higher of a fixed floor or a percentage of the reserve |
| Typical use cases | Euro stablecoins for payments, settlement, remittances | Commodity-backed tokens, multi-currency baskets, synthetic instruments |
Any token designed to serve as a digital replacement for a single fiat currency must be structured as an EMT. This is the natural classification for euro stablecoins used in retail payments, merchant settlement or cross-border remittances. The EMT pathway carries higher prudential expectations, particularly around unconditional redemption at par, but it also benefits from regulatory clarity and broad market acceptance among crypto-asset service providers.
If the token references gold, a basket of currencies, real-estate-backed assets or any combination of non-single-currency values, the ART classification applies by operation of law. Asset-referenced tokens are commonly used for commodity-linked products, yield-generating instruments and multi-collateral designs. Issuers considering algorithmic stabilisation mechanisms should note that MiCA imposes strict reserve-backing requirements, and purely algorithmic models without adequate reserves face significant regulatory risk.
Liechtenstein’s position as an EEA member state means that stablecoin issuance falls under MiCA while also benefiting from the country’s pioneering Token and Trustworthy Technologies Act (TVTG, commonly called the “Blockchain Act”). The FMA Liechtenstein is the single point of contact for authorisation, and the regulator has developed a structured engagement process for token issuers. The steps below outline the typical authorisation pathway for both EMT and ART applicants.
For most stablecoin issuers, establishing an Aktiengesellschaft (AG) or a trust-regulated entity under the TVTG provides the most efficient corporate structure. The entity must maintain a physical presence in Liechtenstein with at least one locally resident director and a local compliance function. Where the issuer already holds an e-money institution or credit institution licence in another EEA state, passporting into Liechtenstein, or vice versa, is an option, though the FMA will still require a whitepaper notification.
| Milestone | Key Documents | Expected Period |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-filing meeting | Token concept paper, draft classification memo | 2–6 weeks |
| Corporate set-up | Articles of association, director appointments, AML programme | 4–8 weeks (parallel) |
| Whitepaper drafting | Full MiCA-compliant whitepaper, reserve policy, governance charter | 6–10 weeks |
| Formal application | Complete dossier: whitepaper, business plan, IT security, own-funds model, outsourcing register | Submission date |
| FMA review and queries | Responses to information requests, supplementary evidence | 3–6 months |
| Authorisation issued | FMA decision, ESMA register notification | Upon completion of review |
Complex reserve structures, novel stabilisation mechanisms or planned cross-border offerings to multiple EEA markets can extend the review period. Early and thorough preparation of the application dossier is the single most effective way to compress the timeline.
Reserve management is the operational backbone of any stablecoin issuance. MiCA imposes detailed requirements that differ between EMTs and ARTs, and the EBA has published supervisory expectations that national competent authorities, including FMA Liechtenstein, apply during the authorisation review.
EMT reserve rules. E-money token issuers must maintain a reserve of assets equal to or exceeding the outstanding value of all tokens in circulation. The reserve must be invested in secure, low-risk assets denominated in the same currency as the referenced official currency. Key obligations include:
ART reserve rules. Asset-referenced token issuers face a broader but still prescriptive framework. Reserves may include diversified assets, government bonds, high-quality corporate debt, regulated money-market fund units and commodities, subject to concentration limits and liquidity requirements. ART issuers must conduct regular stress testing of the reserve portfolio and demonstrate that liquidation under adverse conditions can satisfy all outstanding redemption claims.
Audit and attestation. Both EMT and ART issuers must arrange independent audits of reserve assets. Industry observers expect audited attestation reports at least every six months, with quarterly disclosures for significant tokens. The EBA and FMA review these reports as part of ongoing supervision. Proof-of-reserves mechanisms using on-chain attestation tools may supplement, but do not replace, regulated audit requirements.
Redemption rights are among the most critical compliance elements when learning how to set up a stablecoin. MiCA establishes fundamentally different redemption frameworks for EMTs and ARTs, and getting this wrong can expose issuers to enforcement action and holder claims.
EMT redemption. Holders of e-money tokens have an unconditional right to redeem at par value at any time. The issuer must process redemptions without undue delay, and any fee charged must not exceed the direct cost of the transaction. Issuers cannot impose lock-up periods, minimum redemption thresholds or conditions that effectively frustrate the right to redeem. Operationally, this means building both fiat off-ramp rails (bank transfers, payment-service-provider integration) and on-chain burn-and-settle mechanisms that function reliably at scale.
ART redemption. Redemption rights for asset-referenced tokens are defined by the issuer in the whitepaper and must be clearly disclosed to holders. While ART issuers have more flexibility in structuring redemption mechanics, including phased settlements for illiquid reference assets, they must still ensure that the rights are fair, transparent and enforceable. Regulators will scrutinise any mechanism that disproportionately disadvantages retail holders.
Operational flow. A typical redemption cycle runs as follows:
Issuers must also maintain complaint-handling procedures and a dispute-resolution mechanism for contested or delayed redemptions. Suspended redemptions, for example, during a market stress event, require immediate FMA notification and public disclosure.
The whitepaper is the central disclosure document for any stablecoin issuance under MiCA and must be filed with the FMA before the token is offered to the public. It serves a dual function: it is both the issuer’s prospectus-equivalent for holders and the primary document the FMA uses to assess compliance. A non-compliant whitepaper will delay or prevent authorisation.
The mandatory whitepaper elements include:
The whitepaper must be kept up to date. Any material change, to the reserve policy, redemption terms or governance, requires a revised whitepaper to be filed with the FMA and published to holders before the change takes effect.
A stablecoin does not operate in isolation. Issuers must plan how their token will interact with the broader ecosystem of crypto-asset service providers (CASPs), custodians and fiat payment rails, all of which are now regulated under MiCA.
Even a fully authorised stablecoin faces ongoing operational, legal and reputational risks that must be managed from day one. Key risk categories include:
Audit cadence matters. Regulatory-grade reserve attestations, conducted by an independent auditor, should occur at least semi-annually, with quarterly reporting for tokens approaching significance thresholds. On-chain proof-of-reserves tools can provide continuous public transparency, but they supplement rather than replace formal audited attestations.
For teams ready to move from concept to compliant stablecoin issuance, the following six actions provide a clear starting point:
Understanding how to set up a stablecoin in Liechtenstein demands early, structured engagement with the FMA and a disciplined approach to the EMT-versus-ART decision, reserve design and whitepaper preparation. The jurisdiction’s regulatory infrastructure, EEA passporting capability and established fintech ecosystem make it a compelling base, provided the issuer commits to the compliance rigour that MiCA requires. Prospective issuers should consult experienced Liechtenstein-based payments and digital assets advisors at the earliest opportunity to begin the authorisation process.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Josef Bergt at Bergt Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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