The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) passed the Payment Services Act on January 28, 2020, to improve the regulatory environment. This decision aims to strengthen trust in electronic payments and ensure consumer safety. For example, previously, activities such as storage of valuables (SVF) or money transfers could be exempt from licensing. However, under the current legislation, a Singapore Payment Institution license is required for all new companies if they want to conduct such operations.
Singapore Payment Services
Under the Singapore Payment Services Act, entities must obtain a Singapore Payment Institution license to offer a range of payment services. To operate legally, businesses need this license for activities such as:
- Account issuance
- Domestic money transfer
- Cross-border money transfer
- Merchant acquisition
- E-money issuance
- Digital payment token service
- Money-changing service
For a Standard payment institution license, transaction thresholds are set at:
- S$3 million per month for any single service (excluding e-money issuance and money-changing).
- S$6 million per month for two or more services (excluding e-money issuance and money-changing).
- S$5 million daily for outstanding e-money.
A single service provider, like one offering domestic money transfers, faces a $3 million monthly transaction limit. If multiple services are offered, such as domestic and cross-border transfers, the threshold rises to $6 million monthly. Exceeding these limits necessitates applying for a Major Payment Institution license.