The world’s leading cryptocurrency exchange is notifying European Union clients that it can no longer provide services starting July 1 following its inability to obtain necessary licensing under Europe’s updated digital asset framework.
Binance pulled its Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) licensing request in Greece, effectively removing itself from EU operations before the mandatory July 1 compliance date. MiCA mandates that every cryptocurrency platform serving European customers must possess proper authorization.
Customers across Poland, France, Italy, and Spain received withdrawal instructions before the cutoff date. Management indicated expectations to obtain French licensing within the next several months.
Starting June 22, Binance experienced approximately $400 million in net withdrawals throughout the week, based on DefiLlama tracking. This represents around 0.3% of the platform’s $133.3 billion in monitored holdings.
Wednesday witnessed $1.96 billion in single-day net withdrawals coinciding with the Greek application withdrawal announcement. The following two days recorded $2.52 billion and $1.46 billion respectively.
Despite appearing substantial, multi-billion dollar daily movements represent standard activity for the exchange. Geographic sources of these fund transfers remain unclear from available data.
Multiple cryptocurrency exchanges rapidly positioned themselves to capture European customers ahead of the regulatory transition. OKX, which secured Malta-based MiCA approval in January 2025, attracted $285.5 million in deposits during the identical timeframe.
Yet OKX wasn’t the period’s largest beneficiary. Bitget dominated with $710 million in weekly deposits, while Bitfinex followed at $400 million. Notably, neither Bitget nor Bitfinex currently appear on the European Securities and Markets Authority’s (ESMA) provisional MiCA registry.
ESMA announced June 23 that unauthorized cryptocurrency platforms must execute “immediate steps” to cease EU operations after July 1, restricting activities exclusively to position liquidation, asset transfers, or account closures.
The European situation unfolds as the platform navigates continuing legal and regulatory obstacles. In the United States, Binance admitted guilt in 2023 to allegations involving money laundering and sanctions breaches, consenting to a $4.3 billion settlement. Founder Changpeng Zhao completed a four-month incarceration in 2024 before receiving a presidential pardon from Donald Trump.
The exchange additionally maintains Irish-registered corporate structures that are over a year delinquent in submitting mandatory annual financial reports, creating violations of Irish corporate legislation.
Euro-denominated transactions comprise merely 1% of Binance’s spot trading activity, according to CryptoQuant analyst Maartunn.
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