
Average PSP Licensing Time in UAE (2023–2025): What the Numbers Show
November 3, 2025
Which UAE Jurisdiction Is Right for Your Fintech in 2025?
November 12, 2025Why Substance and Local Directors Matter
In 2025, payment service providers (PSPs) applying in the UAE face heightened scrutiny from the Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) and financial free zones like ADGM and DIFC.
Economic substance and the appointment of local directors are no longer box-ticking exercises — regulators now treat them as essential indicators of whether a PSP is genuinely operating in the UAE or simply using it as a “paper hub.”
The Local Director Requirement
Most PSP categories under CBUAE now require:
- At least one UAE-resident director listed in the company’s commercial licence.
- Demonstrated governance roles for the director, not symbolic appointments.
- Evidence that decision-making authority resides in the UAE.
For firms in free zones like ADGM and DIFC, the Financial Services Regulator Authority (FSRA) and Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA) also enforce local director mandates, especially for payment firms seeking Category 3C or money services permissions.
A common mistake is hiring a “nominee” director without real participation. Regulators increasingly reject such arrangements.
Substance Requirements: Beyond the Office Address
Economic substance rules in the UAE require PSPs to prove they have adequate staff, premises, and expenditure in the country. This aligns with the UAE’s commitment to global tax transparency and anti–base erosion initiatives.
Key expectations include:
- Staffing: compliance, operations, and finance personnel based locally.
- Premises: offices suitable for conducting regulated activity (not just a serviced desk).
- Expenditure: spending aligned with the size and scope of the PSP’s licensed activity.
In 2024, over 20% of financial firms in the UAE were flagged for inadequate substance filings — a signal that 2025 will bring even tougher enforcement.
Why Regulators Are Tightening Oversight
Several factors explain the sharper focus in 2025:
- Global tax pressure: The OECD’s BEPS framework pushes regulators to prove companies are not avoiding taxes through shell operations.
- Investor protection: Local directors provide accountability in case of disputes.
- AML enforcement: A genuine local footprint helps regulators ensure effective monitoring of cross-border payments.
How Firms Can Prepare
- Appoint directors early: Identify qualified UAE-based professionals with relevant payment or financial experience.
- Document governance: Keep minutes showing directors’ participation in decisions.
- Invest in staff: Hire compliance and operational personnel locally rather than outsourcing entirely.
- Budget for substance: Allocate funds for office premises, IT systems, and employee costs in the UAE.
PayCompliance’s Role in Streamlining Setup
For many fintechs, navigating these requirements is daunting. PayCompliance simplifies the process by:
- Mapping director requirements for each PSP category under CBUAE, ADGM, and DIFC.
- Connecting firms with vetted local directors who meet regulator standards.
- Designing substance frameworks — including staffing plans and expenditure models — aligned with regulatory expectations.
- Managing compliance filings so firms don’t miss annual substance reporting deadlines.
By integrating licensing, governance, and ongoing compliance, PayCompliance ensures PSPs meet both the letter and spirit of UAE regulations.
Explore our services:
Conclusion
The days of light-touch licensing are over. In 2025, local directors and substance requirements define whether a PSP can succeed in the UAE. Regulators expect firms to demonstrate a genuine presence — from board-level accountability to staffed offices.
With PayCompliance, fintechs gain not just licence approval, but a sustainable operating model that satisfies regulators, reassures investors, and supports long-term growth in the UAE.



