World Watch/Singapore/Digital Payments & Fintech

Digital Payments & Fintech · Singapore

Digital Payments & Fintech - Singapore

Licensing regimePayment Services Act 2019 (PS Act), administered by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS); digital token services additionally regulated under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2022 (DTSP regime, effective 30 June 2025).

Singapore operates a comprehensive, single-window licensing regime for digital payments and fintech under the Payment Services Act 2019, supervised by MAS. Providers of seven regulated payment services (account issuance, domestic and cross-border money transfer, merchant acquisition, e-money issuance, digital payment token services, and money-changing) must hold one of three licence classes — Money-Changing, Standard Payment Institution, or Major Payment Institution — calibrated by transaction volume and e-money float. Singapore also runs mature instant-payment rails (FAST/PayNow, SGQR) and an open-finance data exchange (SGFinDex), while BNPL is governed by an industry Code of Conduct rather than statutory licensing.

Tiered licensing under the PS Act

MAS issues three licence classes — Money-Changing, Standard Payment Institution (SPI), and Major Payment Institution (MPI). An MPI licence is required once transactions exceed S$3m/month for any single service, S$6m/month across services, or S$5m daily outstanding e-money; SPI applies below those thresholds.

Seven regulated payment services

The PS Act regulates account issuance, domestic money transfer, cross-border money transfer, merchant acquisition, e-money issuance, digital payment token (crypto) services, and money-changing — each requiring a licence to provide to the public.

E-money safeguarding obligations

E-money issuance is a named regulated service; MPI holders face higher standards including safeguarding of customer monies, a security deposit lodged with MAS, and additional compliance requirements relative to SPIs.

Digital token service providers (DTSP)

Beyond DPT services under the PS Act, MAS introduced a DTSP licensing regime under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2022, effective 30 June 2025, covering providers serving overseas markets from a Singapore base.

Instant-payment rails & open access

FAST provides 24/7 interbank transfers and PayNow runs as a proxy-addressing overlay (mobile/NRIC/UEN); SGQR unifies QR acceptance. Since 2021 eligible non-bank financial institutions can connect to FAST and PayNow via a dedicated API gateway.

Open finance (SGFinDex) and BNPL

SGFinDex, a MAS/GovTech Singpass-based data exchange launched December 2020, lets individuals consolidate financial data across banks, insurers and agencies. BNPL is not separately licensed; it is governed by an industry Code of Conduct (under MAS guidance), with all providers accredited since May 2024.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →