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#Gate广场五月交易分享 The world's first case! The UAE officially opens the floodgates, allowing cryptocurrencies to pay government fees
The UAE has once again seized the commanding heights of digital finance. On May 11, Cryptocom’s UAE entity Foris DAX Middle East FZE officially received a Stored Value Facility (SVF) license issued by the central bank, becoming the first local virtual asset service provider to obtain this qualification. Following closely, Cryptocom launched a partnership with Dubai’s Finance Department, enabling residents of the UAE to pay government fees with digital assets.
The significance of this event far exceeds a typical expansion of payment scenarios. Over the past decade, crypto assets have mainly been active in trading, investment, on-chain finance, and cross-border transfers—scenes within the industry. Even when some merchants adopted them, it was mostly for marketing experiments. Government fees are public service bills involving identity verification, fiscal accounting, anti-money laundering, and regulatory responsibilities. Once digital assets cross this threshold, it signals that crypto payments are beginning to touch the most core account systems of the real economy.
Regulatory leadership, followed by scenario development
This license was not granted out of thin air. As early as May 2025, Dubai’s Finance Department signed a memorandum of understanding with Cryptocom, planning to introduce crypto payments into government services. The signing took place at the Dubai Fintech Summit, where the government media office explicitly stated that this was an important part of Dubai’s “cashless strategy.” A year later, the SVF license was approved, completing the most critical link in the entire plan—the license, platform, government bills, stablecoin settlement, and cashless strategy—all forming a complete closed loop.
Dubai’s approach is very pragmatic. Residents make payments through the Cryptocom wallet, with the platform handling exchange, risk control, and clearing in the background; funds entering the fiscal system are ultimately recorded in dirhams or stablecoins approved by the central bank. Users retain the experience of paying with digital assets, while government accounts maintain stable valuation and compliant bookkeeping. This “front-end openness, back-end prudence” structure is precisely the institutional innovation most worth noting in this event.
Dubai did not blindly pursue “end-to-end on-chain payments,” but chose a middle path that is both regulatorily manageable and fiscally acceptable. Government bills are among the most serious payment scenarios, where price volatility and compliance loopholes are unacceptable. Dubai uses central bank licenses and stablecoin settlement as a “safety valve,” allowing crypto payments to truly integrate into the city’s public service network from speculative accounts. This cautious step lays a solid foundation for large-scale expansion in the future.
Stablecoins moving from trading to payments
The most noteworthy beneficiary of this event is not Cryptocom, but stablecoins. Historically, stablecoins played a simple role in the crypto world: as a transfer station for funds on exchanges, used to buy and sell Bitcoin, Ethereum, or for on-chain settlement and cross-border transfers. But government fees, airline tickets, duty-free shopping, tuition, and real estate payments all require a digital unit that is price-stable, settlement-efficient, and regulatorily acceptable.
The role of stablecoins is being forced to upgrade from “transaction medium” to “real-world payment medium.” The model chosen by the UAE is very suitable for stablecoins to realize their value. Users pay with digital assets on the client side, the system completes compliant exchange on the backend, and settlement is ultimately anchored to dirhams. This design not only avoids the impact of price fluctuations on fiscal stability but also allows regulators to clearly trace every fund flow.
Government bills are inherently high-frequency, real, and strongly regulated. If stablecoins can operate here, the potential for expanding into airline, retail, tourism, education, and commercial bills is fully unlocked.
For stablecoins to truly enter mainstream payment markets, the most lacking is not technology but high-credit, real-world scenarios. Dubai’s government bills provide exactly such a “trust anchor.” Once stablecoins are validated as feasible in government fee scenarios, they will no longer be just tools within the crypto community but will become a standard bridge connecting digital assets with the real economy. The next step is to see who can secure more government-level payment scenario access, gaining an advantage in the next phase of competition.
Scenario competition replacing license competition
In the past, the competition among crypto companies often involved issuing licenses, setting up zones, and offering tax incentives. Dubai’s latest answer: the next stage of competition is about who can provide real payment entry points, real user scales, and real government collaboration. Without scenarios, licenses are just access documents; with government bills, airline tickets, duty-free shopping, and tourism payments, licenses become ecosystem gateways.