The Gelephu Financial Services Office (GFSO) is the independent regulator of all financial services and virtual-asset activities in the Gelephu Mindfulness City special administrative region in southern Bhutan, governed by the omnibus Financial Services Act 2025.
The Gelephu Financial Services Office (GFSO) is the independent financial regulator of the Gelephu Mindfulness City (GMC), a special administrative region established in southern Bhutan near the town of Gelephu. The GFSO supervises both traditional finance — banking, securities, insurance, funds and market infrastructure — and blockchain or digital (virtual) asset activities such as cryptocurrency trading and custody.[1]
Beyond licensing and supervision, the GFSO carries an explicit development mandate: it is tasked with building up the financial-services and blockchain ecosystem inside GMC, rather than acting purely as a compliance gatekeeper. This dual role reflects GMC's wider ambition to position itself as a regional finance and fintech hub and to attract internationally regulated firms to the region.[1]
The office operates within the distinct legal order of the GMC special administrative region, which sits apart from the financial regulation that applies in the rest of Bhutan under the Royal Monetary Authority. Its arrangements are set out in the city's wider legal framework and supporting governance institutions, including the GMC board and the Gelephu Investment and Development Corporation.
Regulatory framework
GMC has built its financial-regulatory regime in two phases. In Phase One, the GFSO's rules were drawn from the laws of the Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM), the English common-law financial centre in the United Arab Emirates. Those laws were brought into force in GMC through the Application of Laws Act 2024, which imported a body of foreign statutes — including ADGM instruments — to give the new jurisdiction an established common-law foundation while its own legislation was being drafted.[1]
In the current Phase Two, the GFSO is progressively issuing its own laws to replace the adopted ADGM framework. These home-grown rules are intended to apply to all regulated financial-services and digital-asset activities carried on in or from GMC. The English common-law basis inherited from the ADGM phase has been retained as the underlying legal tradition.[2]
Financial Services Act 2025 and Rulebooks
The principal statute is a single omnibus Financial Services Act 2025 (the FSA), enacted as GMC Law No. 5 of 2025. It is supported by subsidiary legislation that the GFSO calls "Rulebooks". The ten Rulebooks are the Anti-Money Laundering and Sanctions Rulebook (AML), the Captive Insurance Business Rulebook (CIB), the Conduct of Business Rulebook (COBS), the Fund Rulebook (FUNDS), the General Rulebook (GEN), the Glossary Rulebook (GLO), the Market Infrastructure Rulebook (MIR), the Market Rules (MKT), the Prudential — Insurance Business Rulebook (PIN), and the Prudential — Investment, Insurance Intermediation and Banking Rulebook (PRU). Firms dealing in cryptocurrency are additionally directed to Virtual Asset Guidance issued by the office.[1]
Schedule 1 of the FSA, beginning at page 252, lists the "Regulated Activities" that may only be carried out under a licence. The schedule covers both traditional instruments, such as dealing in securities, and virtual-asset activities, such as trading in spot cryptocurrencies. Any firm intending to carry on a regulated activity must obtain a Financial Services Licence from the GFSO before doing so.[1]
Licensing
The GFSO's published process begins with prospective firms contacting the office at gfso@gmc.bt to arrange an initial meeting. At that meeting an applicant presents its business model and explains why it wishes to operate in GMC. Firms that pass this stage are invited to apply for a Financial Services Licence covering the specific regulated activities they intend to undertake.[1]
On 12 May 2026, GMC announced an accelerated licensing pathway for companies already regulated in established global financial centres, naming Singapore, the Abu Dhabi Global Market and Hong Kong. The scheme combines an expedited regulatory review by the GFSO with immediate access to banking, allowing qualifying firms to incorporate, obtain approval and open corporate accounts through a single coordinated process.[3] GMC board member Jigdrel Singay said the design was meant "to remove friction from the system", recognising firms that had "already demonstrated credibility in leading jurisdictions". The pathway pairs licensing with banking through DK Bank, whose chief executive noted that obtaining a bank account is often where licensed firms become stuck.[2]
The GFSO grants approvals in stages. An applicant first receives an In-Principle Approval, after which it must satisfy the remaining licensing conditions before the full Financial Services Licence is issued. In February 2026 the digital-asset firm Matrixport announced that its Bhutan entity had received an In-Principle Approval, stating that no regulated services would be offered until final approval was granted.[4] On 14 May 2026, BTSE Bhutan, a subsidiary of the cryptocurrency exchange BTSE, received an In-Principle Approval for a licence covering two regulated activities — operating a multilateral trading facility for virtual assets and providing institutional-grade custody — described in industry coverage as the first such exchange approval under the regime.[5]
Significance and criticism
The GFSO is central to GMC's strategy of courting cryptocurrency and fintech businesses, which connects to Bhutan's broader cryptocurrency policy and its history of bitcoin mining using surplus hydropower. In December 2025 Bhutan pledged up to 10,000 bitcoin to support GMC's long-term development, and the city has announced plans to hold bitcoin, ether and BNB as part of a strategic crypto reserve.[6]
Observers have raised concerns about this model. Anchoring public development to a crypto-backed balance sheet exposes the project to price volatility, and commentators have questioned the transparency and governance of how such reserves are managed, as well as the reputational risk should the financing mechanism overshadow GMC's stated social and ecological aims.[6] Because the GFSO is a new regulator operating partly on adopted ADGM rules and partly on still-emerging home-grown law, its supervisory record cannot yet be assessed; much of the available information comes from GMC's own promotional channels (gmc.bt) and from the press releases of firms it has approved, rather than from independent oversight bodies.
References
- Gelephu Financial Services Office (GFSO) — Gelephu Mindfulness City (primary/promotional source)
- Bhutan's Gelephu Mindfulness City unveils fast-track licensing for global finance and crypto firms — CoinJournal
- Bhutan's Gelephu Mindfulness City launches fast-track licensing for regulated crypto firms — The Block
- Matrixport Announces In-Principle Approval for Regulated Financial Services in Gelephu Mindfulness City — The Manila Times / PR Newswire
- Bhutan's Gelephu Mindfulness City Opens Fast-Track Crypto Licensing as BTSE Secures First Exchange Approval — Blockhead
- Bhutan Commits Up to 10,000 Bitcoin to Back New Mindfulness-Based Economic Hub — CoinDesk
See also
Legal framework of Gelephu Mindfulness City
Gelephu Mindfulness City is a Special Administrative Region whose Royal Charter of 2024 vests executive, legislative and independent judicial power in the GMC Authority. Its Application of Laws Act 2024 adopts around 18 Singaporean statutes and 10 Abu Dhabi Global Market financial regulations, creating a common-law-influenced commercial legal system distinct from Bhutan's national civil-law order.
politics·9 min readGelephu Investment and Development Corporation
The investment arm of the Gelephu Mindfulness City Authority, established under royal charter to attract and channel capital into the special administrative region and into wider Bhutanese development. It is chaired by the Japanese technologist Joichi "Joi" Ito.
politics·6 min readDepartment of Forests and Park Services
The Department of Forests and Park Services (DoFPS) is the Bhutanese government agency responsible for protecting, conserving and managing the country's forests, wildlife and protected areas. Founded in 1952 and placed under the agriculture ministry in the early 1980s, it administers the constitutional requirement that at least 60 per cent of Bhutan's land remain under forest cover, and manages the national parks and biological corridors that cover more than half the country.
politics·2 min readGovernance of Gelephu Mindfulness City
The administrative and legal structure of Gelephu Mindfulness City, a Special Administrative Region in southern Bhutan headed by a board chaired by the King, with Dasho Dr Lotay Tshering as Governor and a leadership drawn largely from Singapore and international business.
politics·7 min readOffice of the Prime Minister of Bhutan
The Prime Minister of Bhutan (Dzongkha: Lönchen) is the head of government of the Kingdom of Bhutan. Appointed by the Druk Gyalpo (King) from the leader of the majority party in the National Assembly, the Prime Minister chairs the Cabinet, directs national policy, and serves as the principal link between the executive and legislative branches.
politics·5 min readGoods and Services Tax (Bhutan)
The Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a broad-based consumption tax legislated in Bhutan under the Goods and Services Tax Act of Bhutan 2020. Intended to replace the existing sales tax and excise duty with a single uniform rate, it represents the country's largest tax reform, but its implementation has been postponed repeatedly because of technical problems with the supporting IT system and the disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic.
politics·2 min read
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