Uzbekistan continues to refine its regulatory framework for crypto-asset service providers through a new set of amendments to the licensing regime administered by the National Agency of Perspective Projects. The changes build upon earlier reforms and signal a clear shift toward enhanced supervisory discretion, stronger compliance expectations, and greater investor protection within the digital asset market.
The amendments introduce structural adjustments to the existing Regulation on licensing activities in the field of crypto-asset circulation, complementing earlier revisions adopted in 2024. They are grounded in the Agency’s statutory mandate as the authorized regulator of crypto-assets and capital markets.
The most notable development is the formal introduction of the concept of “motivated judgment.”
Under the amended framework, the licensing authority may apply a professional assessment that prioritizes the substance over the form of the matter under review. This assessment may rely not only on formally submitted documents but also on:
Importantly, “motivated judgment” is now explicitly included among the grounds for refusing to issue a license.
This significantly increases regulatory discretion. Even where formal documentation appears compliant, the Agency may refuse a license if risk indicators, reputational concerns, or AML/CFT-related information suggest heightened exposure.
For applicants, this means that licensing is no longer a purely document-driven process, it has become a risk-based assessment.
The amendments also strengthen investor protection requirements. License applicants must ensure that operational documentation and public communications include clear warnings regarding:
This reflects a policy orientation toward aligning the crypto sector with international standards of transparency and consumer awareness.
The revised regulation consolidates and expands the grounds for refusal to issue a license. These include:
Earlier amendments also clarified that refusal cannot be based on vague or discretionary considerations outside the expressly listed grounds. The current reform therefore balances broader supervisory tools with formalized refusal criteria.
Previous changes introduced stricter documentation requirements for foreign founders and executives, including legalized or apostilled criminal record certificates with notarized translation.
Taken together, the reforms reinforce:
The Agency’s regulatory authority and mandate in crypto-asset circulation, including licensing and oversight functions, are established under presidential-level acts, providing institutional backing for this strengthened regime.
The cumulative effect of the amendments indicates a transition from a formal compliance model to a risk-based supervisory model consistent with global regulatory practice.
Key characteristics of the evolving framework include:
For crypto exchanges, custodians, wallet operators, and other service providers, this signals a more mature and demanding regulatory environment.
Uzbekistan is not restricting crypto-asset activity; rather, it is institutionalizing it within a more rigorous supervisory architecture.
The introduction of “motivated judgment” as a licensing tool marks a decisive step toward sophisticated regulatory oversight. Market participants must therefore reassess their compliance architecture, governance structures, and transparency practices to ensure alignment with the strengthened regime.
The reforms underscore a broader strategic objective: fostering innovation in digital finance while ensuring systemic integrity, investor protection, and reputational safeguards in the national crypto ecosystem.