Dubai residents can now settle government taxes and fees using Bitcoin and other digital assets. The emirate’s Department of Finance has struck a partnership with Crypto.com to make that happen, turning one of the world’s most crypto-friendly jurisdictions into one of the first to actually let people pay the government in digital currency.
The mechanics are designed to keep government coffers insulated from crypto volatility. Payments made through Crypto.com in Bitcoin or other supported digital assets are settled exclusively in UAE dirhams or Central Bank-approved dirham stablecoins. The government never actually holds Bitcoin. It receives local currency every time, with Crypto.com handling the conversion layer in between.
That conversion capability exists because Crypto.com recently secured a Stored Value Facilities license from the Central Bank of the UAE, reportedly around May 12, 2026. That license made it the first Virtual Asset Service Provider in the Emirates to receive full SVF approval, a designation that allows the platform to hold and transfer stored monetary value on behalf of users.
The regulatory architecture behind this involves three entities working in coordination. The Dubai Department of Finance oversees the fiscal side. VARA, the emirate’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority, handles crypto-specific oversight. And the Central Bank of the UAE provides the monetary framework that ensures settlements land in fiat or approved stablecoins.
Dubai levies 0% personal capital gains tax on crypto disposals. There’s no personal income tax at all. For businesses, the picture is slightly different: a 9% corporate tax applies to revenues exceeding AED 375,000, and a 5% VAT hits crypto transactions involving goods and services.
Industry observers expect that Dubai’s favorable regime will continue pulling high-net-worth individuals away from jurisdictions with heavier tax burdens, particularly the US. Every new person or business that relocates brings capital, transaction volume, and ecosystem density with it.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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