What is a
DFSA licence?
A DFSA licence is an authorisation issued by the Dubai Financial Services Authority, the regulator of the DIFC (Dubai International Financial Centre). DFSA-licensed firms are categorised by the financial-services activity they perform, with seven principal categories (Cat 1 through Cat 5 plus specialised licences) covering banking, asset management, fund management, advisory, dealing and capital-markets activity.
What are the DFSA categories?
- Category 1 — Authorised to accept deposits and provide credit (banks).
- Category 2 — Dealing in investments as principal (market makers, proprietary traders).
- Category 3A — Dealing as agent (broker-dealers).
- Category 3B — Providing custody / CIS operator services.
- Category 3C — Fund manager (managing collective investment funds).
- Category 3D — Managing assets (discretionary portfolio management).
- Category 4 — Advising on investments / arranging deals.
- Category 5 — Operating an Islamic financial institution.
What capital is required?
Capital requirements scale by category. Base capital ranges from USD 70,000 (Cat 4 advisory) to USD 10 million+ (Cat 1 banking). Risk-based capital add-ons apply for trading book exposures, operational risk and credit risk where relevant.
How does DFSA differ from FSRA, CBUAE and CMA?
- DFSA — regulates entities in DIFC (Dubai International Financial Centre).
- FSRA — Financial Services Regulatory Authority of ADGM (Abu Dhabi Global Market). Equivalent function in a different free zone.
- CBUAE — Central Bank of the UAE. Regulates federal-level banking, payment services, SVF, money services. Applies on the UAE mainland.
- CMA — Securities and Commodities Authority. Federal securities regulator for the UAE mainland.
For institutional financial services targeting international clients, DFSA or FSRA are typically the preferred regulators. For mainland-facing payment services, CBUAE is the gateway. For UAE-mainland securities offerings, CMA engages.
What's the application process?
DFSA licensing follows three stages: pre-application engagement, Initial Authorisation (regulatory business plan, governance, capital, fit and proper), and Operational Authorisation (systems, processes, compliance framework, AML/CFT). Total timeline typically 6–12 months for straightforward categories; longer for complex banking or capital-markets activities.
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