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Cuál es la regulación blockchain de Uruguay y cómo afecta a la tokenización de activos reales RWA

Blockchain Regulation in Uruguay: Essential Guide 2026

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The adoption of blockchain technology and asset tokenization is advancing at a rapid pace, but the real engine driving its global development is the existence of a clear, consistent and innovation-friendly legal framework.

Some countries have already established themselves as regulatory benchmarks, establishing specific rules for cryptoassets, DLT infrastructures and token issuance with legal backing. In this article we show you relevant information about blockchain regulation in Uruguay, which you can use as a guide if you are looking to operate internationally or evaluate different strategic locations.

Discover blockchain regulation in Uruguay (Law 20.345 on virtual assets, BCU, UIAF, DGI).

Current legislation on blockchain and virtual assets in Uruguay

Virtual Assets Law (No. 20,345)

Since September 2024, Law No. 20,345 comprehensively regulates virtual assets in Uruguay and their service providers (PSAVs). The BCU and the SSF supervise and authorize Uruguay PSAVs, requiring transparency and consumer protection. Extends securities market regulation to instruments issued in DLT technology, incorporating decentralized registration scriptural securities as a new category of scriptural security in the Securities Market Law No. 18,627. The Central Bank of Uruguay and the SSF supervise and authorize PSAVs, requiring transparency and consumer protection. Extends securities market regulation to DLT instruments.

Integral Anti-Money Laundering Law (No. 19.574)

It establishes the main framework for the prevention of money laundering and terrorist financing. PSAVs were incorporated as AML regulated entities through Central Bank of Uruguay and UIAF circulars and regulations issued as of 2021-2022, before Law 20.345 formalized the comprehensive regulatory framework in 2024. Requires client identification, monitoring and reporting to UIAF. Complies with FATF standards.

UIAF and BCU Regulations on Uruguay PSAV

The UIAF and the Central Bank of Uruguay have issued specific regulations for the supervision of VSPs. They establish internal control, monitoring and suspicious transaction reporting obligations. Non-compliance may be administratively sanctioned. They reinforce the prevention of financial crimes.

Communication from the Central Bank of Uruguay (BCU) regarding virtual assets

The Central Bank of Uruguay clarifies that cryptoassets are not legal tender in Uruguay. Warns about risks and requires registration and compliance with AML/CFT rules for PSAVs. Imposes minimum standards of transparency and consumer protection. Maintains active supervision of the sector.

Tokenization makes it possible to digitally represent real-world assets through blockchain, but for it to have legal value, it is essential that there is a regulatory framework that recognizes this operation. Uruguay adopts its own approach, establishing specific rules for the issuance, custody or trading of tokens. In this block we explain how asset tokenization is regulated from a legal point of view, taking an advanced jurisdiction such as Uruguay as an example.

Regulation of asset tokenization in Uruguay

Uruguay has had Law No. 20,345 since 2024, which comprehensively regulates virtual assets and grants the Central Bank (BCU) and the Superintendency of Financial Services (SSF) the supervision of virtual asset service providers (PSAV). The law extends securities market regulation to marketable securities managed in DLT technology, making security tokens that qualify as securities subject to the Securities Market Law and the supervision of the SSF, with issuance, registration and transparency requirements.

For the tokenization of non-financial assets there is still no specific sectorial regulation, so these projects are structured under Uruguayan private law and tax and consumer protection obligations apply according to the nature of the tokenized asset. The use of DLT technology is not expressly recognized as an official registration system outside the financial sphere, although it may provide evidentiary value in transactions and legal relationships.

Uruguay has not implemented regulatory sandboxes or DLT pilot regimes, but the new law lays the groundwork for the Central Bank of Uruguay to define financial services on virtual assets and supervise industry players. The regulatory environment is favorable and a regulatory evolution is expected to consolidate a clearer and more competitive framework for tokenization, aligned with FATF standards and the experience of the Uruguayan financial regulator.

Regulatory agencies and authorities for digital assets in Uruguay

Central Bank of Uruguay (BCU)

The BCU is the competent authority in the regulation and supervision of the Uruguayan financial system. Since Law No. 20,345 (2024), it regulates and authorizes PSAVs, establishing prudential and operational requirements. It supervises their operations, issues guidelines on virtual assets and coordinates with the UIAF for AML/CFT control.

Superintendency of Financial Services (SSF)

The SSF is the division of the Central Bank of Uruguay that manages, analyzes and supervises the registration and accreditation process of the PSAVs and the entities of the Uruguayan financial system, promoting the stability, solvency and transparency of the market. It establishes rules, monitors compliance with legislation and applies sanctions when appropriate.

Financial Information and Analysis Unit (UIAF)

The UIAF is the body in charge of preventing money laundering and terrorist financing in Uruguay. It supervises compliance with AML/CFT obligations by PSAVs, manages the registers of regulated entities and analyzes suspicious transactions reported, coordinating with international organizations.

General Tax Directorate (DGI)

The DGI is the national tax authority. It establishes the tax criteria applicable to activities with virtual assets, audits the declaration of income derived from operations with cryptoassets and verifies compliance with tax obligations by PSAVs and taxpayers.

Launching a business based on digital assets requires more than just technology: it is also necessary to comply with legal requirements such as licensing, registration and regulatory obligations. These conditions ensure that the business model is viable and sustainable over time, and that it complies with transparency and fraud prevention standards. In this section we explore what licenses are usually required and what compliance criteria blockchain companies operating in Uruguay must follow.

Discover blockchain regulation in Uruguay (Law 20.345 on virtual assets, BCU, UIAF, DGI).

What licenses and requirements are needed to operate with cryptoassets in Uruguay?

PSAV Uruguay Registration

Law No. 20,345 establishes the obligation for Uruguay PSAVs to obtain authorization from the Central Bank of Uruguay to operate. However, the operating regulation specifying authorization requirements, minimum capital, deadlines and procedures was put out for public consultation by the SSF in August 2025, with a revised version published in March 2026. As of 2026, these regulations have not yet been finally promulgated, so operators must monitor the publication of the final BCU regulations before starting the authorization process. In addition, they must register as regulated entities with the Financial Information and Analysis Unit (UIAF) to comply with AML/CFT regulations.

AML/KYC Compliance

Uruguay PSAVs must implement policies to prevent money laundering and terrorist financing, including customer identification and verification (KYC) controls, transaction monitoring, risk analysis and suspicious transaction reporting to the UIAF. Compliance with these obligations is essential to operate legally and maintain BCU authorization.

Tax obligations

Income generated by activities with cryptoassets is subject to the Uruguayan tax framework. Uruguay PSAVs and taxpayers must declare this income before the General Tax Directorate (DGI), complying with the tax provisions in force and keeping adequate accounting records that reflect the operations with virtual assets, according to the nature of the activity and the type of taxpayer.

Are you exploring developing your blockchain project in Uruguay?

At Metlabs we help companies like yours and offer comprehensive support in the development of blockchain projects and tokenization of assets such as real estate, carbon credits, commodities, intellectual property, financial instruments, franchises and more, fully aligned with blockchain regulation in Uruguay and international regulatory standards.

Contact us and find out how we can help you meeting all your business model needs, from technical validation and structuring to design, development and implementation of custom blockchain solutions, ready to scale from day one.

Investment in cryptoassets is not regulated, may not be suitable for retail investors and the entire amount invested may be lost. It is important to read and understand the risks of this investment, which are explained in detail.