The United Kingdom, Germany, and Liechtenstein are currently leading the region in adopting and integrating cryptocurrency, according to the European Crypto Adoption Report by CoinsPaidThe United Kingdom, Germany, and Liechtenstein are currently leading the region in adopting and integrating cryptocurrency, according to the European Crypto Adoption Report by CoinsPaid

CoinsPaid Names Europe’s Leading Countries in Cryptocurrency Adoption

The United Kingdom, Germany, and Liechtenstein are currently leading the region in adopting and integrating cryptocurrency, according to the European Crypto Adoption Report by CoinsPaid. While the EU implements new unified rules under MiCA, the flexibility of non-EU leaders has given them an advantage. 

CoinsPaid, an ecosystem of solutions for cryptocurrency integration, has published a comprehensive report analyzing 41 European countries across five dimensions: regulation, business activity, taxation, technology, and accessibility. 

Between 2020 and 2024, crypto adoption in Europe has steadily increased. While progress varies by country, the overall trend remains upward, driven largely by infrastructure improvements and regulatory maturity.

The Report’s Key Insights

  • The United Kingdom, Germany, and Liechtenstein are leading the region in adopting cryptocurrency.

  • Countries with higher GDP scores tend to achieve higher crypto adoption rankings.

  • Countries that joined the EU after 2000 typically score in the mid-range, with significant variability.

  • Most EU candidate countries remain in the early stages of adoption. Georgia is the outlier, driven by a strong regulatory push.

  • The United Kingdom, Switzerland, and Liechtenstein top the index thanks to targeted, innovation-friendly regulation. 

  • Germany, France, and other founding EU states rank high across multiple factors, benefiting from institutional maturity and economic scale.

How did CoinsPaid conduct the research?

CoinsPaid assessed a set of indirect indicators across five areas: technological development; business and infrastructure; regulation; taxation; and public interest and engagement. These factors were selected based on data availability and their application in academic research and other indices. Data covering 41 European countries over five years was collected and standardized. The team applied statistical methods to weigh indicators within each factor and group them into meta-indices. Partial Least Squares (PLS) regression was then used to combine the meta-indices into the final Index.

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