Regulation

Revolut Receives In-Principle Approval from UAE Authorities for Crypto Services

Dubai's VARA has granted Revolut in-principle approval to offer broker-dealer, management and investment, and exchange services in the UAE, with 22 entities now holding such approval in the region.

⏱ 2 min read Regulation
Quick Summary
  • VARA granted Revolut in-principle approval covering broker-dealer, management and investment, and exchange services in the UAE.
  • VARA currently lists 51 fully licensed crypto firms in the UAE and 22 with in-principle approval, including Kraken parent Payward approved in May.
  • Revolut plans to delist USDT starting in August for EEA and Switzerland users under the EU MiCA framework, while also awaiting a US banking charter and Peru licence.

UK-based fintech giant Revolut has secured in-principle approval from Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) to offer cryptocurrency services in the United Arab Emirates, moving the company a step closer to launching digital asset services in the region.

What the Approval Covers

According to a notice issued on Wednesday, the VARA clearance follows an earlier green light from the Central Bank of the UAE for payment activities. The in-principle approval covers three service categories: broker-dealer operations, management and investment services, and exchange services. Revolut said UAE-based users will be able to buy, sell, and hold digital assets through both the main Revolut app and the Revolut X exchange platform.

Joseph Khair, Revolut’s head of digital assets in the UAE free zone establishment, commented: ‘This approval lays the foundation for Revolut to introduce its trusted virtual asset services within a regulated environment.’

UAE Regulatory Landscape

At the time of publication, VARA listed 51 companies holding full licences to offer crypto-related services in the UAE, with 22 entities holding in-principle approval, including Revolut. In May, VARA also preliminarily approved Payward, the parent company of cryptocurrency exchange Kraken, with a full regional launch expected soon.

The distinction matters. In-principle approval signals VARA’s intent to license rather than permission to operate, and firms must still complete the regulator’s remaining requirements before serving customers. Payward received its preliminary nod two months ago and has yet to fully launch.

Revolut’s Broader Expansion Push

The UAE regulatory nod follows Revolut obtaining a UK banking licence in March. The London-headquartered company still has applications pending for a US banking charter and a licence in Peru as part of its ongoing global expansion programme.

USDT Delisting Looms for European Users

The UAE approval arrives as Revolut narrows its crypto offering elsewhere. Last week, a Revolut spokesperson confirmed the company plans to delist Tether USDt (USDT) starting in August for users in the European Economic Area and Switzerland. The decision followed a review of Revolut’s crypto services and risk considerations under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework, which required companies offering digital asset services to obtain a licence by July 1.

The two moves point in opposite directions: Revolut is working toward opening a crypto business in the Gulf while pulling the largest stablecoin from its European users to satisfy that region’s rules.

⚖️ Our Verdict ⚖️ Watch and Wait

Clearing VARA's first hurdle puts Revolut on a path into one of the more accommodating crypto jurisdictions, backed by an existing UAE payments approval and a UK banking licence. But in-principle approval is not a licence: Revolut cannot yet serve UAE customers, and Kraken's parent has sat at this stage since May without launching. The company is also moving the other way in Europe, delisting USDT for EEA and Swiss users under MiCA. Progress worth tracking, not a market opened.