Quick Answer:
In 2026, Mauritius is moving beyond virtual asset experimentation toward a structured financial infrastructure. By aligning the VAITOS Act 2021 with the Securities Trading System (STS) framework, the jurisdiction enables platforms to facilitate the trading of both native virtual assets and tokenised securities. For Fintech founders, this regulatory environment—supported by specific capital requirements and Section 11 (Securities Act) oversight—provides the settlement finality needed to attract institutional liquidity.
From Sandbox to Institutional Infrastructure (Mauritius, 2026)
Beyond the Sandbox: A Policy Signal for Infrastructure
The narrative surrounding Fintech in Mauritius has shifted. In 2026, the focus is on structural mainstreaming. As highlighted by recent FSC signals, the goal is no longer just to “promote” digital finance, but to enforce the regulatory rails that sustain it.
For investors, the real story of 2026 is the interoperability between the Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) framework and the Securities Trading System (STS) licence. This dual-layered approach positions the Mauritius International Financial Centre (MIFC) as a venue for sophisticated digital financial products.
The VAITOS and STS Synergy: Hybrid Marketplace Rules
While the VAITOS Act 2021 formalised five classes of VASP licences (M, O, R, I, S), the 2026 market is focused on how Class S (Marketplace) interacts with the STS Guidance Note.
FSC standards clarify that platforms trading tokenised securities must navigate a specific licensing logic. Under Section 11 of the Securities Act 2005, an STS allows for a regulated venue that can, when combined with VASP classes, offer a single dashboard for tokenised shares, debt instruments, and virtual assets. This provides the predictability that institutional capital requires before committing to digital markets.
Capital Requirements and Operational Scaling
Mauritius maintains a calibrated capital regime. Compared to jurisdictions like the EU (MiCA) or the UAE (VARA), the Mauritian framework remains accessible while upholding high entry standards.
The 2026 Capital Stack:
- VASP Class M (Broker-Dealer): Minimum capital of approximately MUR 2 million.
- VASP Class S (Marketplace): Minimum capital typically ranging from MUR 4M to 6.5 million, subject to FSC risk-profile assessment.
- VASP Class R (Custodian): Requires robust financial resources to ensure 1:1 asset segregation.
The Custody Challenge: Solving the Digital Integrity Gap
A primary concern for investors remains secure, regulated custody. In 2026, Mauritius addresses this through the Class R VASP licence and strict AML/CFT protocols. The focus is now on the admissibility of digital evidence and annual cybersecurity audits.
A licensed custodian must segregate client assets and maintain cold-storage controls. By aligning with FATF Recommendation 15, the MIFC ensures that banking relationships remain viable for digital asset participants.
Comparative Landscape (2026)
| Regulatory Aspect | Mauritius (STS/VAITOS) | EU (MiCA) | UAE (VARA) |
| Trading Venue | Securities Act s.11 / VASP Class S | CASP (Full effect 2026) | VA Trading Platforms |
| Capital Entry | MUR 2M – 6.5M | €125,000+ | AED 1,000,000+ |
| Custody Rule | Class R / Segregated Assets | Strict Segregation | VARA Custody Code |
| Settlement | Real-time Blockchain / s.11 Securities Act | DLT Pilot Regime | VARA Market Rules |
Strategic Settlement: Real-Time Blockchain Efficiency
The STS licence (granted under Section 11 of the Securities Act) is the cornerstone for platforms aiming for “Settlement Finality.” In the 2026 ecosystem, these platforms enable real-time blockchain settlement, reducing counterparty risk.
For institutional investors, this improves liquidity flows. Platforms must demonstrate that settlement records are irrevocable and backed by a licensed agent. By removing the lag between trade execution and asset transfer, a Mauritius-based STS provides a level of efficiency that traditional T+2 exchanges are still working to integrate.
Compliance as a Competitive Edge
The regional emphasis on governance reinforces the message that Mauritius is serious about enforcement. In 2026, growth in digital finance is paired with a push for digital resilience.
For a Fintech startup, being licensed in a jurisdiction that takes enforcement and FATF alignment seriously is a long-term reputational asset. It simplifies the due diligence expectations for global financial service providers.
Building the Financial Rails of 2027
As we approach 2027, the trend of regulatory convergence will accelerate. The founders who succeed will be those who embrace institutional-grade frameworks.
Blue Azurite Limited operates at the forefront of this transition. Our expertise covers the technical mapping of VAITOS compliance onto scalable trading infrastructures. We provide the regulatory blueprint needed to bridge the gap between digital assets and global liquidity pools. Contact us now for more information.
Sources of this article:
- VAITOS in Mauritius: Complete 2026 Guide to Virtual Asset and Initial Token Offering Services
- Establishing a VASP under the VAITOS Act in Mauritius in 2026 – SALVUS Funds
- Mauritius VASP License 2026: Complete VAITOS Licensing Guide — Classes, Costs & Compliance | Zitadelle AG
- Mauritius: Virtual assets – Key considerations for market participants | Bowmans
- Communique 2026 – Mauritius Revenue Authority






