Table of Contents
How to Build a Crypto Exchange in Puerto Rico:
TRWAs, Act 60, Act 273,
and Why Puerto Rico Leads the United States
Puerto Rico is the most favorable jurisdiction in the United States for crypto exchanges, digital asset businesses, and investors in tokenized real-world assets. No state in the continental U.S. can combine 0% capital gains tax, a 4% corporate rate on qualifying income, a dedicated crypto regulatory framework, and a legally binding tax decree that locks in your rates for 15 to 20 years. This guide covers what tokenized real-world assets are, how they work, how Act 60 and Act 273 apply to digital asset operations, and the complete roadmap for building a compliant crypto exchange in Puerto Rico.
Puerto Rico: The Crypto Capital of the United States
The complete visual guide to tokenized real-world assets, crypto exchange licensing, Act 60 tax incentives, and why no other U.S. jurisdiction comes close.
Why Puerto Rico Holds a Unique Position in U.S. Crypto Law
Puerto Rico operates under the United States legal system. Federal courts apply. U.S. contract law applies. FinCEN, the SEC, and CFTC jurisdiction applies where relevant. At the same time, Puerto Rico is a U.S. territory, not a state, which means residents and businesses operating on the island are not subject to federal income tax on Puerto Rico-sourced income under Section 933 of the Internal Revenue Code.
That combination, full U.S. legal protection with territorial tax status, is what creates the foundation for Puerto Rico's crypto incentive structure. No offshore arrangement is required. No foreign company formation. No complex international tax planning. A properly structured Puerto Rico entity, backed by an Act 60 tax grant, allows a crypto business to operate inside the U.S. legal system while paying a 4% corporate rate on qualifying export services income and 0% on qualifying capital gains for individual resident investors.
Section 933 of the Internal Revenue Code excludes Puerto Rico-sourced income from the federal gross income of bona fide Puerto Rico residents. This is the structural foundation of every Act 60 tax incentive. It is a statute, not a loophole, and it has been in the code since 1954.
The island also has dedicated crypto regulation. The Puerto Rico Office of the Commissioner of Financial Institutions (OCIF) administers a virtual currency regulatory framework built specifically for digital asset businesses. This is not an improvised application of legacy banking rules. Puerto Rico built a compliance pathway for crypto from the ground up, and it is the only U.S. regulator to have done so.
"Puerto Rico is the only U.S. jurisdiction where a crypto investor can achieve 0% capital gains, operate under full U.S. legal protection, and hold a legally binding government decree locking in that rate for two decades."
What Are Tokenized Real-World Assets (TRWAs)?
Tokenized real-world assets, commonly referred to as TRWAs, are physical or financial assets that have been converted into digital tokens on a blockchain. The token represents ownership of, or a claim against, the underlying asset. The asset itself remains governed by its existing legal structure. The token is the digital instrument through which that ownership is recorded, transferred, and traded.
TRWAs are not a new financial product category. They are an infrastructure upgrade applied to existing asset classes. The underlying assets include:
- Real estate and property: Commercial buildings, land parcels, and residential developments tokenized for fractional ownership and global secondary trading
- Corporate bonds and private equity: Debt instruments and equity stakes in private companies converted into on-chain securities with programmable compliance
- Commodities: Gold, oil, agricultural commodities, and natural resources represented as blockchain tokens backed by physical custody arrangements
- Receivables and revenue streams: Invoices, royalties, subscription revenue, and other cash-flow instruments tokenized for early liquidity
- Art, intellectual property, and collectibles: Fine art, patents, trademarks, music rights, and high-value collectibles issued as fractional on-chain instruments
The tokenized real-world asset market surpassed $300 billion in 2024. Analysts at Boston Consulting Group and BlackRock project the market will reach $16 trillion by 2030. Puerto Rico is building the regulatory and tax infrastructure to be the primary U.S. compliance hub for that growth.
The core advantages of tokenization are fractional ownership, which lowers the minimum investment threshold; 24-hour global liquidity, which removes geographic and time-zone barriers from secondary trading; programmable compliance, which automates KYC, transfer restrictions, and income distribution through smart contracts; and settlement speed, which reduces the time required to complete a transaction from days to minutes.
How the Tokenization Process Works
Bringing a real-world asset on-chain requires four sequential steps. Each step has legal and technical components, and Puerto Rico provides the regulatory and tax infrastructure to support each one.
Traditional securities settlement takes two business days (T+2). Tokenized asset settlement on a public blockchain takes seconds to minutes and operates continuously, including weekends and holidays. For a fund manager operating a TRWA platform from Puerto Rico, that speed difference is also a competitive advantage taxed at 4% corporate rate.
Act 60: The Tax Framework That Makes Puerto Rico the Right Choice
Puerto Rico Act 60, the Puerto Rico Incentives Code, consolidates decades of tax incentive legislation into a single statutory framework. Two chapters are directly relevant to crypto businesses and digital asset investors.
Corporate rate on qualifying income from blockchain services, crypto trading, digital asset management, DeFi development, and TRWA platforms serving clients outside Puerto Rico.
Capital gains tax on assets acquired after establishing bona fide Puerto Rico residency. Grants run 15 to 20 years and are issued as a legally binding contract with the Government of Puerto Rico.
To maintain the grant, the business must maintain a physical office in Puerto Rico, hire at least one full-time Puerto Rico resident employee, contribute $75,000 annually to a qualifying Puerto Rico charity, and file annual compliance reports with the Department of Economic Development (DDEC).
A California resident who exits a $10 million crypto position pays approximately $3.33 million in combined federal and state capital gains tax. An Act 60 decree holder in Puerto Rico pays $0 on the same transaction. The grant application and decree process costs a fraction of that figure. The decree pays for itself in a single liquidity event.
Both the Chapter 2 business grant and the Chapter 3 individual grant are issued as legally binding tax decrees by the DDEC. A decree is a contract between the grantee and the Government of Puerto Rico that locks in the applicable tax rates for 15 to 20 years. A change in administration does not affect an existing decree. The rates are fixed for the life of the grant.
Act 273: The International Financial Center Framework for Digital Asset Exchanges
Puerto Rico Act 273, the International Financial Center Regulatory Act, created a focused regulatory structure for International Financial Entities (IFEs). Act 273 was designed for offshore-facing financial services operations, and it pairs directly with Act 60 to create a full-stack incentive structure for a licensed digital asset exchange or TRWA platform operating from Puerto Rico.
An IFE licensed under Act 273 can conduct digital asset custody and settlement, foreign currency transactions, private banking for non-U.S. resident clients, securities trading and portfolio management for international clients, and tokenized asset issuance and management.
Most commentary on Puerto Rico crypto law focuses exclusively on Act 60 Chapter 3 and the 0% individual capital gains rate. Act 273 is the institutional layer. It provides the operating license and tax treatment for the entity itself, turning Puerto Rico into a viable registered headquarters for a digital asset exchange or TRWA fund, not just a residency play for individual investors.
Building a Compliant Crypto Exchange in Puerto Rico: The Complete Roadmap
The path from concept to live operations for a Puerto Rico-based crypto exchange has five documented steps. Each step has specific legal, regulatory, and operational requirements, and the order matters. Errors in sequencing, particularly filing for the Act 60 grant after the business has already been operating, can affect the scope and validity of the incentives received.
Puerto Rico's OCIF is the only financial regulator in the United States that built a dedicated crypto exchange licensing pathway from the ground up. Every other state applies legacy money transmitter statutes, designed for wire transfers and check cashing, to digital asset businesses. Puerto Rico wrote rules specifically for virtual currency from day one.
Common Structuring Mistakes That Void the Tax Incentives
The Act 60 and Act 273 incentives are available only to businesses and individuals who meet every requirement, every year, for the life of the grant. Several common mistakes result in the loss of the grant or an IRS determination that the claimed Puerto Rico source income was actually U.S.-sourced income subject to full federal taxation.
The IRS operates a dedicated Puerto Rico compliance program targeting Act 22 and Act 60 Chapter 3 claimants. The program has produced hundreds of examinations, assessments, and Tax Court cases since 2018. Proper structuring and ongoing compliance documentation are the only protection against a full federal capital gains assessment on income a taxpayer believed was exempt.
Puerto Rico vs. Other U.S. Jurisdictions for Crypto Businesses
The numbers are direct. On $5,000,000 in qualifying capital gains, a Puerto Rico Act 60 Individual Resident Investor pays $0. No other U.S. jurisdiction produces that result.
Florida has no state income tax, which makes it a popular choice for crypto investors, but Florida residents still pay full federal capital gains tax. Wyoming has made headlines for crypto-friendly legislation, but Wyoming residents pay full federal income tax and have no equivalent of the territorial tax exclusion. Puerto Rico's advantage is structural, not political. It flows from the island's unique status as a U.S. territory.
Florida saves you state tax. Puerto Rico eliminates the federal tax entirely. Those are not the same thing, and for a high-net-worth crypto investor, the difference can be measured in millions per transaction.
Next Steps: Schedule Your Free Initial Evaluation
The Act 60 grant application process takes time, and the grant covers income earned only after it is issued. Every month without a decree in place is a month of income taxed at standard rates. The sooner the process begins, the more years of rate protection the grant covers.
Puerto Rico Business Law Firm has represented clients in Act 60 grant applications, OCIF registrations, blockchain compliance structuring, and digital asset business formations for over 25 years. The firm handles the full scope of what a crypto exchange or TRWA platform needs to operate compliantly in Puerto Rico, from entity formation through the grant decree, regulatory registration, and ongoing annual compliance.
To begin, schedule your free initial evaluation. Bring your business plan, your current entity structure if one exists, and a description of the activities you intend to conduct. The evaluation covers whether your activities qualify under Act 60, what the application process looks like, and what structuring is required to protect the incentives from day one.
Structure it correctly from day one.
Act 60 grants are issued at the discretion of the DDEC. The sooner your decree is filed, the more years of rate protection it covers. Proper structuring is the foundation of every valid claim.
Schedule Free Evaluation →