World Watch/Denmark/Digital Payments & Fintech

Digital Payments & Fintech · Denmark

Digital Payments & Fintech - Denmark

Licensing regimeDanish Payments Act ('Lov om betalinger') implementing PSD2 and the E-Money Directive (EMD2), supervised by Finanstilsynet (Danish FSA); EU MiCA applies to crypto-asset services. BNPL/consumer credit governed by the Consumer Loan Undertakings Act and Credit Agreements Act.

Denmark operates a clear, in-force licensing regime for payments and fintech. Payment institutions and e-money institutions must be authorised by Finanstilsynet under the Danish Payments Act, which transposes the EU PSD2 and E-Money frameworks, and PSD2-based open banking (access to accounts via APIs) is enforced. Crypto-asset service providers fall under the EU MiCA Regulation (fully applicable since 30 December 2024) and BNPL credit was brought within the consumer-credit licensing regime in July 2023.

Competent authority & core law

Finanstilsynet (Danish FSA) licenses and supervises payment institutions and e-money institutions under the Danish Payments Act ('Lov om betalinger'), assessing financial soundness, governance, risk management, AML and cybersecurity before granting authorisation.

Payment & e-money licences

The Act provides distinct authorisations for payment institutions (full payment services, including fund transfers and payment-account management) and e-money institutions (issuing e-money such as digital wallets/prepaid cards), plus restricted/limited authorisations, transposing PSD2 and the E-Money Directive.

Open banking (PSD2)

Denmark enforces PSD2 through Finanstilsynet, requiring banks to provide APIs allowing licensed third-party providers to initiate payments and access account information with customer consent (AIS/PIS access to accounts).

Instant-payment rails

Denmark launched its instant A2A rail Straksclearing ('Express Clearing') in 2014; Danish-krone settlement migrated to the Eurosystem's TARGET Services in 2025, bridging to pan-European instant settlement (TIPS) and the EU Instant Payments Regulation.

Crypto-assets (MiCA)

The EU Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) has been fully applicable in Denmark since 30 December 2024, with Finanstilsynet authorising and supervising crypto-asset service providers; the national transitional period ended 30 December 2025, and the FSA takes a notably strict line on what counts as genuinely decentralised/exempt.

Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL)

Effective 1 July 2023, bill L 58 amended the Consumer Loan Undertakings Act (lov om forbrugslånsvirksomheder) and Credit Agreements Act (kreditaftaleloven) to bring most BNPL providers under the consumer-credit licensing/creditworthiness regime; a narrow exemption remains only for interest- and fee-free seller-granted deferrals up to 90 days.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/25/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →