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    Home » Canada’s FINTRAC revokes registrations of 23 crypto MSBs in AML crackdown
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    Canada’s FINTRAC revokes registrations of 23 crypto MSBs in AML crackdown

    James WilsonBy James WilsonMarch 18, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Canada’s FINTRAC has yanked 23 crypto MSBs from its registry in a single sweep, escalating an AML crackdown that now targets exchanges, ATMs and offshore operators alike.

    Summary

    • FINTRAC revoked the registrations of 23 money services businesses offering crypto services, citing failures to respond to information requests, keep records updated, or meet AML eligibility conditions.
    • The move follows Finance Minister François‑Philippe Champagne’s February order to “mobilize resources” against illicit finance and high‑risk virtual currency businesses, including crypto ATMs and foreign operators.
    • Ottawa has already signalled its direction with a record C$176.96 million fine against Cryptomus operator Xeltox in 2025, and Tuesday’s sweep suggests systemic, not one‑off, enforcement is now the norm.

    Canada’s financial intelligence agency delivered its most sweeping single-day enforcement action against the cryptocurrency sector on Tuesday, revoking the registrations of 23 money services businesses (MSBs) offering crypto-related services in one coordinated move. The action by the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre (FINTRAC) represents a significant escalation in Ottawa’s campaign to bring virtual currency operators into line with the country’s anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing framework.

    All 23 of the affected businesses are registered as MSBs under Canada’s Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act (PCMLTFA), and all offer cryptocurrency-related services. Two of the companies have no physical presence in Canada: Finax, operating out of Bratislava, Slovakia, and Commerce Plex, registered in Luton, England — both of which also provide currency exchange and money transfer services alongside crypto. According to FINTRAC’s official website, grounds for revocation include failure to respond to information requests in a timely manner, non-compliance with registration eligibility conditions, failure to update relevant records, and prior convictions related to money laundering or terrorist financing.

    The mass revocation did not emerge in a vacuum. In February 2026, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne wrote directly to FINTRAC’s director ordering the agency to “mobilize resources” in response to the serious threat posed by illicit finance — explicitly calling on the Centre to take “immediate action” in supporting law enforcement partners and financial institutions. On Tuesday, Champagne characterised the enforcement sweep as a “significant acceleration of enforcement pace,” adding that the government would “continue to maintain this momentum”.

    The minister’s public statement left little ambiguity about the government’s broader intent: “Our government will continue to monitor and pursue new measures to address risks posed by virtual currency businesses, such as cryptocurrency MSBs and crypto ATMs, which can be used to facilitate money laundering and fraud.”​

    The action follows a string of high-profile FINTRAC enforcement decisions against crypto operators. In October 2025, FINTRAC levied a C$176.9 million administrative monetary penalty against Xeltox Enterprises Ltd., operating as Cryptomus — the largest fine in the agency’s history — for 2,593 separate violations of the PCMLTFA, including failure to report over 1,500 large virtual currency transactions and repeated breaches of federal directives requiring the reporting of transactions linked to Iran. That case, according to law firm Bennett Jones, “highlights the regulatory perils that face cryptocurrency exchanges that operate in Canada outside the law”.

    FINTRAC’s mandate covers a broad swathe of the financial sector. Registered MSBs handling crypto are required to implement customer due diligence, submit transaction reports, maintain records, and establish written AML compliance frameworks approved by senior management. Failure to comply can result in administrative penalties, removal from the MSB registry, or in the most serious cases, criminal exposure.​

    Canada has for several years positioned itself as a jurisdiction that treats virtual asset services as an integral part of its AML-regulated financial sector — with crypto exchanges required to register and comply at the federal level since June 2020. But Tuesday’s mass revocation suggests that Ottawa’s appetite for enforcement is moving beyond isolated penalties toward systemic sweeps. With crypto ATMs, cross-border operators, and foreign-registered entities explicitly named as priorities, the message from FINTRAC and the Finance Ministry is unambiguous: registration alone is no longer sufficient cover for those unwilling to meet Canada’s compliance bar.



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