Many fintech products begin with a simple user problem: make payments easier, reduce friction, move money faster, support merchants, simplify marketplace transactions, or create better financial workflows for businesses.
From a technical point of view, the first questions are usually about APIs, payment gateways, user accounts, transaction logic, fraud controls, reconciliation, and system reliability. But once a product starts handling payment flows, another question becomes critical: does the business need a Payment Institution licence?
For founders, developers, and product teams building in Europe, this question should be considered early. Licensing is not only a legal matter. It can affect product architecture, onboarding flows, compliance logic, banking relationships, reporting, and the long-term scalability of the business.
What is a Payment Institution licence?
A Payment Institution licence, often called a PI licence, allows a company to provide regulated payment services. Depending on the business model, this may include services such as executing payment transactions, money remittance, payment account services, merchant acquiring, payment initiation, or other activities connected with the movement of funds.
This type of licence can be relevant for businesses building:
payment processing platforms;
money transfer products;
marketplace payment flows;
merchant service solutions;
payment account services;
remittance platforms;
fintech infrastructure;
crypto-fiat payment models;
embedded payment products;
financial technology tools for businesses.
Not every product that touches payments needs a full PI licence. Some companies may work through licensed partners, operate under a smaller registration category, or structure the product differently. However, if the company controls regulated payment flows or provides payment services directly, licensing may become necessary.
Why licensing affects product architecture
Payment licensing should not be treated as a final administrative step after the product is already built. In regulated fintech, the legal model and the technical model need to work together.
A product may look simple from the user interface, but regulators, banks, and partners will want to understand what happens behind the scenes:
Who receives the funds?
Who holds or controls the funds?
When is the payment executed?
Are client funds safeguarded?
What happens if a transaction fails?
How are refunds handled?
How are users verified?
How are suspicious transactions detected?
Which third-party providers are involved?
What data is stored and where?
These questions influence how the platform should be designed. If the licensing model is considered too late, the company may need to rebuild payment flows, internal ledgers, user onboarding, compliance checks, transaction monitoring, reporting tools, and partner agreements.
Payment flows need clear documentation
For a Payment Institution licence, the company must be able to explain its business model in a structured way. This includes both commercial and technical details.
A strong application usually needs clear documentation of:
target customers;
payment services provided;
user journey;
transaction flow diagrams;
fund flow diagrams;
revenue model;
internal controls;
risk management;
safeguarding approach;
AML procedures;
IT systems;
outsourcing arrangements;
business continuity plans.
For developers and product teams, this means that technical documentation is not just internal engineering material. It may become part of the company’s regulatory explanation.
Well-documented systems are easier to review, audit, improve, and explain to banks, regulators, investors, and partners.
AML and transaction monitoring
Payment businesses are exposed to financial crime risks because they facilitate the movement of money. This makes AML and transaction monitoring central to the licensing process.
A fintech company needs procedures for customer due diligence, risk assessment, sanctions screening, transaction monitoring, suspicious activity escalation, record keeping, and ongoing review.
The important point is that these procedures must connect to the actual product.
If the written AML policy says the company monitors transactions, the platform should have a practical way to detect unusual patterns, apply limits, review alerts, and document decisions. If the policy describes customer risk scoring, the onboarding process should collect the information needed to support that scoring.
Compliance should not be a separate PDF folder disconnected from the product. It should be part of the operating system.
Why governance matters
A PI licence is not granted only because a company has a useful payment product. The company must show that it can operate responsibly.
This usually involves demonstrating:
transparent ownership;
suitable management;
clear decision-making;
internal controls;
risk management;
compliance oversight;
financial planning;
operational readiness;
IT security;
business continuity;
proper outsourcing management.
For startup founders, this can feel heavy compared to building an MVP. But in regulated fintech, governance is part of the product’s credibility. Banks, partners, and regulators need confidence that the company can manage risks, protect customers, and operate sustainably.
The Czech Republic as an EU payment licensing option
The Czech Republic can be considered by fintech and payment companies looking for an EU jurisdiction for regulated activity. It has a recognized supervisory framework and may be practical for international teams planning to develop payment services within the European market.
However, choosing a jurisdiction should never be based only on perceived speed or cost. Founders should consider the business model, target markets, local presence, management structure, capital requirements, banking strategy, compliance obligations, and long-term operational plans.
The right question is not only “Where can we get licensed?” but “Where can we build and operate the business properly?”
Common mistakes in PI licensing projects
Several mistakes are common among fintech founders.
The first is building the product before defining the regulatory model. This can create expensive redesigns later.
The second is using generic compliance documents that do not match the real business model. Regulators and banks usually expect policies that reflect actual customers, services, risks, and transaction flows.
The third is underestimating banking readiness. Payment companies need strong explanations, clear documentation, and transparent financial and operational processes.
The fourth is treating licensing as a one-time milestone. In reality, authorisation is only the beginning. A licensed payment institution must maintain compliance, reporting, governance, controls, monitoring, and operational discipline after approval.
Final thoughts
For fintech builders, a Payment Institution licence is not just a legal permission. It is part of the company’s business architecture.
It affects how payments are processed, how users are onboarded, how risks are monitored, how funds are safeguarded, how systems are documented, and how the company communicates with regulators, banks, investors, and partners.
Founders and developers who think about licensing early can build better payment products, avoid regulatory surprises, and create systems that are easier to scale. In fintech, strong infrastructure is not only technical. It is legal, financial, operational, and compliance-ready.
Resource: https://amseurope.eu/services/financial-and-payment-licenses/pi-licence-in-the-czech-republic/
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