Key Takeaways
The MiCA transition period ended on July 1, 2026. From that date, only firms holding a MiCA authorization can legally offer crypto services to clients in the European Union and the wider European Economic Area.
Only 244 firms were authorized at the deadline. That is a sharp drop from the more than 3,000 crypto businesses that operated in Europe under older national registration regimes.
Users of unlicensed platforms have two main options. Regulators have told them to move assets to a MiCA-authorized provider or to a self-hosted wallet while unlicensed firms wind down their EU services.
On July 1, 2026, the European Union's crypto market changed in a way most users could not see on their screens. Apps still opened, balances were still visible, and markets kept trading. But the legal foundation underneath every crypto platform serving European customers had shifted. The transition period of the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, better known as MiCA, officially ended. From that day, any company offering crypto services to clients in the EU without a MiCA license is operating illegally.
This article explains what MiCA is, what the end of the transition period means in practice, why only a fraction of Europe's crypto firms made the cut, and what it all means for users.
What Is MiCA?
MiCA stands for Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation. It is the European Union's comprehensive rulebook for crypto assets and the companies that provide crypto services. It is widely regarded as the first framework of its kind at this scale, covering all 27 EU member states plus the additional countries of the European Economic Area.
Before MiCA, each European country regulated crypto its own way. A firm might be registered as a virtual asset service provider in Poland, hold a different registration in France, and follow separate rules in Germany. MiCA replaces that patchwork with a single set of rules covering:
Crypto-asset service providers (CASPs), such as exchanges, brokers, and custodians
Stablecoin issuers, split into asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens
Consumer protection, including how client assets must be safeguarded
Market abuse rules, covering insider trading and market manipulation in crypto
A key feature is passporting. Once a firm is authorized in one member state, it can offer services across the entire EU and EEA under that single license, rather than seeking approval country by country.
MiCA Timeline at a Glance
Date | Milestone |
|---|---|
June 2023 | MiCA enters into force after adoption by the EU |
June 30, 2024 | Stablecoin rules begin to apply to issuers of asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens |
December 30, 2024 | Full licensing rules for crypto-asset service providers apply; transition period begins for firms already registered under national regimes |
May 2026 | The European Commission opens a review of the framework, including its stablecoin rules |
July 1, 2026 | Transition period ends; firms without MiCA authorization must stop serving EU clients |
What Changed on July 1, 2026
The transition period, sometimes called the grandfathering period, allowed firms that were already operating under national rules as of December 30, 2024 to keep serving customers while they applied for a MiCA license. That window closed on July 1, 2026.
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), the EU's markets regulator, confirmed the consequences. Firms without authorization must stop regulated activity, stop onboarding new EU clients, end marketing aimed at EU users, and limit their services to what is needed for an orderly exit. They may continue custody only for as long as it takes clients to sell, transfer, or withdraw their assets.
This applies to companies based outside the EU as well. A foreign exchange cannot serve or solicit European clients without authorization. The only narrow exception is reverse solicitation, where a client contacts a foreign provider entirely on their own initiative, without any marketing from the provider's side.
The Numbers: From Thousands of Firms to 244
The scale of the reduction is the most striking part of the story. According to ESMA's interim register, 244 crypto-asset service providers were authorized across the EU and EEA when the transition period closed. Before MiCA, more than 3,000 firms were registered under national regimes, with some counts putting the figure at roughly 3,400 as of May 2025. These pre-MiCA numbers are estimates, since national registers varied in quality and many registrations belonged to small or inactive entities.
Metric | Figure | Source and notes |
|---|---|---|
Firms registered under old national regimes | 3,000+ (widely reported) | Aggregated national VASP registers; includes many small or inactive entities |
MiCA-authorized CASPs at the July 1 deadline | 244 | ESMA interim register, last updated June 26, 2026 |
CASPs after the first post-deadline register update | 280 | ESMA added 37 newly approved firms in early July |
Share of EU trading volume on licensed exchanges | About 83% | Estimate by research firm Kaiko, as of June 2026 |
Two points add context. First, ESMA updates its register weekly, so newly approved firms keep appearing after the deadline. Second, many pre-MiCA registrations were shell entities with minimal activity, so the drop in legal access points overstates the drop in actual market activity.
Which Countries Issued the Most Licenses
Authorization is handled by national regulators, and the results have been uneven. Based on compilations of ESMA's register around the deadline:
Country | Approximate authorizations | Notes |
|---|---|---|
Germany | 57 | The largest licensing hub in the EU under MiCA |
France | 26 to 31 | The AMF approved several firms in the final days, lifting its count to 31 |
Netherlands | 26 | An early and active licensing jurisdiction |
Malta and Cyprus | Significant clusters | Popular bases for exchanges using passporting, including OKX and FalconX in Malta |
Italy | 8 | Approvals coordinated between Consob and the Bank of Italy |
Greece, Hungary, Poland | 0 at the deadline | No MiCA licenses issued by July 1, 2026 |
The zero counts matter. Poland alone had well over 1,400 registrations under the old regime, and by some accounts around 2,000 crypto entities, yet none held a MiCA license at the deadline. Industry executives have criticized this gap, arguing that delays in national implementation left firms in some countries without a realistic path to authorization in time.
Licensed Exchanges, and the Binance Exception
Most of the largest global exchanges secured authorization before the deadline. Coinbase, Kraken, OKX, Bybit (through its regulated EU entity), Crypto.com, Bitstamp, Gate, and Bitpanda are among the major platforms that can serve European users under MiCA, each passported across the EEA from a single home regulator.
The most notable exception is Binance, the world's largest exchange by volume. Binance pursued a license through Greece's securities regulator for about 18 months, then withdrew its application on June 24, 2026, days before the deadline. The company has said it intends to apply again in another member state. Until it is authorized, Binance cannot operate as a crypto-asset service provider for EU clients, and it has been restricting services for EEA residents on its global platform.
According to estimates from the research firm Kaiko, exchanges holding a MiCA license already accounted for roughly 83 percent of European trading volume as of June 2026, which suggests the deadline formalized a shift toward regulated venues that was already underway.
What Unlicensed Firms Must Do Now
For the firms that did not obtain a license, the end of the transition period is not a gray area. ESMA and national regulators have set out clear wind-down expectations:
Stop onboarding new EU clients and stop opening new accounts
End all marketing directed at EU users
Provide only the services needed for clients to sell, transfer, or close positions
Continue custody only for the time needed to complete an orderly exit
Notify clients and protect client assets throughout the wind-down
Continuing regulated activity without authorization is now a violation of EU law, and the penalty exposure is significant. Reported figures suggest fines for certain MiCA violations can start at 5 million euros or 5 percent of annual turnover, with some proposals for stablecoin-related breaches reaching higher percentages. Day-to-day enforcement sits with national regulators, so the intensity of supervision may differ between countries at first.
What This Means for Users
If you use a licensed platform, little changes in practice, although you now benefit from EU-wide rules on asset safeguarding, governance, and complaint handling. If your platform did not obtain a license, regulators have described two main destinations for your assets:
Transfer to a MiCA-authorized provider, which you can verify on ESMA's interim register or on national regulator lists
Withdraw to a self-hosted wallet, where you control the private keys yourself
Self-custody is not a loophole here. It is one of the officially suggested exit routes, since holding your own crypto is not a licensed activity under MiCA. One large affected exchange reported that about 70 percent of funds withdrawn by its EU users moved to self-hosted wallets, a widely reported but unverified figure. Whichever route you choose, the practical first step is the same: confirm the authorization status of any platform before relying on it.
OKX (licensed in Malta) and Bybit EU (licensed in Austria) are both fully compliant, offer strong product depth for EU traders, and are processing new account registrations now. Other solid options include Coinbase, Kraken, Bitstamp, and Bitvavo.
Why So Few Firms Made It
The low conversion rate, around 17 percent even on generous counts, comes down mostly to cost and capability. Getting licensed requires strong anti-money-laundering controls, segregation of client funds, minimum capital, governance standards, and management teams that pass regulatory fit-and-proper tests. Reported estimates put implementation costs at roughly 350,000 to 600,000 euros for many firms, and up to 2 million euros for complex business models, before ongoing compliance staffing. For small firms, that math often did not work.
Analysts broadly expect consolidation as a result. Firms that missed the deadline for timing reasons rather than business quality may become acquisition targets, while licensed firms gain an advantage across a market of roughly 450 million people. Critics counter that the compliance burden risks pricing out smaller innovators and concentrating the market.
What Comes Next
MiCA is now fully in force, but it is not finished evolving. The European Commission opened a review of the framework in May 2026, asking market participants whether the rules remain suitable, with particular focus on stablecoins, reserve requirements, redemption rights, and whether the EU should recognize foreign stablecoin regimes. The answers could shape amendments over the coming years.
In the shorter term, expect the register of authorized firms to keep growing as pending applications are approved, and watch how national regulators handle their first enforcement cases. The transition period tested whether firms could comply. The next phase tests whether Europe's single rulebook is applied consistently across 27 countries.
FAQ
What does CASP mean?
CASP stands for crypto-asset service provider. Under MiCA, it covers businesses that offer regulated crypto services such as operating an exchange, executing orders, providing custody, or advising on crypto assets. A CASP must be authorized by a national regulator in the EU to serve clients in the bloc.
Is it illegal for me, as a user, to keep assets on an unlicensed exchange?
MiCA regulates firms, not individual users. The legal obligations and penalties fall on the service provider. However, regulators have advised users of unlicensed platforms to move their assets to an authorized provider or a self-hosted wallet, because unlicensed firms must wind down their EU services and access may become restricted.
Does MiCA regulate self-hosted wallets?
Holding your own crypto in a self-hosted wallet is not a licensed activity under MiCA. The regulation targets companies that provide services to others. In fact, regulators have named self-hosted wallets as one of the two suggested destinations for assets leaving unlicensed platforms.
What is MiCA passporting?
Passporting means a firm authorized in one EU member state can offer its services across all EU and EEA countries under that single license. This is why many exchanges chose one home regulator, such as Malta, Ireland, or Germany, and then expanded across the region.
Is Binance banned in Europe?
Binance is not authorized under MiCA after withdrawing its license application in Greece in June 2026. Without authorization, it cannot legally provide regulated crypto services to EU clients, and it has been restricting services for EEA residents. The company has said it plans to apply again in another member state, so its status could change.
How can I check whether a platform is licensed?
ESMA maintains an interim public register of authorized CASPs, updated weekly. National regulators, such as France's AMF or Germany's BaFin, also publish their own lists, which may show new approvals slightly earlier than the central register.
Disclaimer: This content is for educational and informational purposes only and is not financial advice. Nothing here is a recommendation to buy or sell any asset or use any platform. Do your own research and manage your risk.
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