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Dash Targets the Philippines as a Growing Market for Crypto Payments



Dash is evaluating the Philippines as a potential destination for crypto payments, positioning the project’s technology as a way to reduce transaction costs in a market where users may be accustomed to high fees.


Speaking to Cointelegraph at Philippine Blockchain Week 2026, Daria Chernozub, global adoption lead at Dash Blockchain, said Dash is focusing on emerging markets that need simpler, lower-cost payment options and where people can adopt new financial tools more easily.



Key takeaways



  • Dash says it is exploring the Philippines for crypto payments, citing demand for lower-cost transactions and easier-to-use payment tools.

  • Dash’s team is still assessing local conditions and prioritizing legal compliance before pursuing any launch.

  • Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) officials describe corporate registration for foreign investors as fast via online processes, while crypto-specific compliance is expected to be more complex.

  • Industry participants note that crypto firms entering regulated channels can face multi-year preparation and obligations.



Why Dash sees the Philippines as a fit for payments


Chernozub framed Dash’s approach around practical payment needs—especially in places where users encounter “high commissions” and want options that are straightforward to use. In her view, the Philippines aligns with that demand because consumers appear willing to learn about new technologies.


She also emphasized that Dash has not committed to a launch yet. Instead, the project is conducting an on-the-ground market assessment and treating compliance as a prerequisite for moving forward.


As part of its preparations, Chernozub said Dash has begun discussions with major local market participants and prepared a legal opinion letter intended to support conversations with relevant regulatory and financial industry bodies.



From quick corporate setup to tougher crypto compliance


At Philippine Blockchain Week 2026, Philippine SEC Commissioner Rogelio Quevedo told Cointelegraph that foreign investors can register a corporation online from anywhere in the world in approximately 20 to 30 minutes. He characterized this as part of the SEC’s broader digitization and innovation push.


Quevedo’s remarks point to a meaningful improvement at the corporate formation stage—setting up a local entity may now be far less time-consuming than it once was. However, the same process does not automatically translate into permission to operate in crypto markets. Crypto firms may still need additional approvals and licensing depending on what they plan to do.


That distinction matters for investors and operators because the “first gate” (legal presence) can be quick, while the “second gate” (sector-specific regulatory clearance) may still be slow and resource-intensive.


Earlier coverage from Cointelegraph on the Philippines’ regulatory posture has also highlighted how readiness varies by activity—whether the work is framed around tokenization, exchange activity, or other regulated functions. In Dash’s case, its stated focus is on payments, which typically means regulators will look closely at how value transfers are handled, how risks are managed, and what customer protections apply.



Regulated entry is possible—but timelines can be long


In a separate interview at the same event, Marie Antonette Quiogue, head of legal and CEO of Arden Consult, said the SEC has created a framework for foreign crypto exchanges to enter a regulated environment.


Still, Quiogue stressed that compliance comes with substantial obligations. She cited that BlockShoals spent roughly two years developing its arrangement with Binance, describing it as an example of how much work can be required to align with regulatory expectations.


For market participants, this “two-speed” reality—fast corporate registration on one hand and longer regulatory development on the other—helps explain why projects may take time even when the legal baseline is improving. It also suggests that investors should treat early regulatory engagement as a project-critical path rather than an afterthought.



What could attract foreign firms beyond regulation


Quiogue pointed beyond regulatory infrastructure, highlighting demographic and market characteristics that may make the Philippines attractive for foreign crypto-related businesses. She referenced the country’s young population, high mobile usage, and widespread English proficiency as factors that could support adoption.


For a payments-focused project like Dash, these elements can be especially relevant. Mobile-first behavior can reduce friction in payment experiences, while English proficiency can make onboarding and product communication easier across regions.


At the same time, adoption drivers do not eliminate compliance requirements. Even with strong user demand, Dash’s own comments indicate that it intends to proceed only after it completes legal groundwork and confirms how its proposed payment approach fits the local regulatory expectations.



Looking ahead


Dash’s next step will likely be less about announcing a market and more about clearing the compliance path it has already started discussing—particularly as the Philippines continues to modernize corporate processes while crypto oversight remains more demanding. Readers should watch for updates on Dash’s legal positioning and whether its payment model can align smoothly with Philippine regulatory expectations.



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