Launching a private label product in the UAE involves more than branding and packaging. Businesses must comply with product registration, labeling, testing, and regulatory requirements before entering the market. Learn the key compliance steps, common registration challenges, and how to avoid costly delays when launching private label products in the UAE.
UAE Launches Regulated Dirham-Backed Stablecoin
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Launching a private label product in the UAE involves more than branding and packaging. Businesses must comply with product registration, labeling, testing, and regulatory requirements before entering the market. Learn the key compliance steps, common registration challenges, and how to avoid costly delays when launching private label products in the UAE.
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Importing excise goods into the UAE requires more than customs clearance—it demands strict compliance with Federal Tax Authority (FTA) regulations. The EX201 Import Declaration is a mandatory requirement for businesses importing tobacco products, energy drinks, carbonated beverages, and electronic smoking devices. In this guide, we explain what the EX201 declaration is, who must submit it, the documents required, common compliance risks, and how businesses can avoid costly shipment delays and penalties while ensuring smooth customs clearance.

UAE Launches Regulated Dirham-Backed Stablecoin: A Legal and Economic Turning Point
The UAE has officially entered the next phase of its digital transformation journey with the launch of a regulated dirham-backed stablecoin, positioning itself as a global leader in digital currency infrastructure. This move by the Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) introduces not only a new payment solution but a full legal framework that sets the tone for compliant cryptocurrency operations within the Emirates, particularly under DIFC and ADGM jurisdictions.
Backed by major Abu Dhabi institutions — First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB), ADQ, and International Holding Company (IHC) — this stablecoin is not just a financial innovation but a strategic leap forward that has immediate implications for business structuring, banking, and regulatory compliance in the region.
Regulatory Framework: Only the Dirham-Backed Survives
The newly implemented Payment Token Services Regulation (PTSR) provides regulatory certainty by permitting only dirham-backed tokens issued by licensed UAE entities to be used for payments. This excludes foreign and algorithmic stablecoins, underlining the government’s commitment to stability, AML compliance, and monetary sovereignty.
This legal framework offers clarity for lawyers, founders, and investors looking to operate in DIFC or ADGM. It also aligns with the broader Financial Infrastructure Transformation (FIT) program, aimed at modernizing the UAE’s financial backbone and supporting future digital assets licensing initiatives.+
What This Means for Business
The launch of a dirham stablecoin will transform how businesses operate in the UAE and beyond:
- Faster Settlements: Instant, secure transactions will reduce reliance on traditional banking rails.
- Greater Financial Inclusion: Easier access to payments for underbanked users through regulated wallets.
- Improved Regulatory Certainty: Businesses now have a legal framework to build compliant crypto and fintech solutions.
- New Opportunities in ADGM & DIFC: Family offices, VCs, fintechs, and high-net-worth individuals can structure regulated entities under these common law jurisdictions to engage in digital asset ventures.
From tokenized real estate to B2B settlements, the use cases for the stablecoin are wide — and all rooted in regulatory clarity.
Strategic Role in the Global Economy
This move aligns with the UAE’s ambition to become a global hub for blockchain and digital finance. With established laws around virtual assets (VARA in Dubai), tax-friendly zones like ADGM, and internationally respected arbitration systems in DIFC, the UAE now offers one of the most legally robust environments for launching compliant crypto ventures.
The dirham-backed stablecoin also provides a foundation for future CBDC development, cross-border fintech innovation, and greater interoperability with Asia, Africa, and Europe — all while reinforcing the UAE’s monetary control.
Conclusion: A Jurisdiction Ready for Regulated Crypto
The UAE’s launch of a regulated stablecoin isn’t just a fintech story — it’s a legal and strategic inflection point. For investors, founders, and legal professionals focused on regulated crypto, fintech, and digital banking, the environment has never been more structured and opportunity-rich.
How We Can Help
At Bizzmosis, we advise startups, UHNW individuals, and institutions on regulatory licensing, fund structuring, and digital asset compliance under DIFC, ADGM, and other UAE jurisdictions.
Whether you’re looking to:
- Launch a regulated crypto company
- Establish a holding structure to support tokenized assets
- Navigate CBUAE or VARA compliance
…our consultants can design the right structure for your goals — balancing innovation with regulatory peace of mind.
This article is drafted by Marco Marazzi, Business Solutions Legal Advisor of Bizzmosis Group








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