If you use a crypto exchange in Europe, your access could change on July 1. Are you ready?
Seventeen days from now, the MiCA deadline lands with no grace period, no extensions, and no exceptions. The European Securities and Markets Authority confirmed this on April 17, 2026: any entity providing crypto-asset services to EU clients without a licence after July 1 is breaking EU law and must immediately stop.
Source: X(formerly Twitter)
Hogan Lovells counted only 194 licensed crypto firms across the EU as of May 2026, including banks, in a market that had more than 3,000 registered crypto companies back in 2024. Around 75% of those older firms are expected to lose their right to operate once the grace period ends.
That gap — 194 licensed against 3,000-plus operating — is the story behind the MiCA deadline that every crypto user needs to understand right now.
The MiCA deadline is not a surprise. The regulation — officially the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation — passed in June 2023. It gave the industry 18 months to get licensed. That runway ends on July 1, 2026.
Before MiCA, over 1,200 VASP entities held national registrations across the bloc. Roughly 210 CASPs have been authorised across 23 EU member states as of May 2026 — a conversion rate of under 18%.
The numbers reveal a dramatic regional split. Only 14 platforms hold trading authorisation across the Europe, and 10 member states have issued zero licenses. Germany leads with 53 authorised entities. In France, only 30% of roughly 90 unlicensed firms had applied for authorisation as of January 2026. A further 40% did not intend to apply at all.
Estonia shows the scale of the collapse most clearly. The country had 641 licensed virtual asset service providers at its peak. Today it contributes almost nothing to the authorised CASP register — the vast majority chose not to pursue licensing.
After the MiCA deadline date, any entity providing crypto-asset services to clients without a licence is in breach of law and must immediately cease operations. No further grace periods or extensions are available under the current regulation text.
Unlicensed platforms face five options after July 1:
Obtain a full CASP licence before the deadline
Cease Europe operations entirely
Execute an orderly wind-down with proper client notification
Transfer EU client accounts to a licensed institution
Face enforcement — website blocks, public warning lists, and regulatory fines
The MiCA deadline has already reshaped which tokens you can hold on EU-regulated exchanges — and that change is now permanent.
Tether's USDT has been removed from major Europian exchange spot markets. Circle's USDC and EURC are the only top-ten stablecoins fully authorised under MiCA.
The USDT delisting happened across the major regulated platforms well before July 1. Crypto.com halted it for users in January 2025. Binance delisted USDT and eight other non-compliant stablecoins from EEA spot markets in March 2025. Kraken halted EEA spot trading for USDT in the same month.
Tether chief executive Paolo Ardoino cited MiCA's requirement to hold 60% of e-money token reserves in European bank deposits as incompatible with Tether's reserve model. Tether did not apply for EMT authorisation under MiCA.
The exchanges that have secured full CASP authorisation are operating cleanly through the deadline: Major exchanges, including Kraken, Coinbase, Bitstamp, Bitpanda, OKX, and Crypto.com, have secured licenses. If your exchange is on that list, your access stays intact.
For exchanges not on the licensed register — the situation changes on July 1. They must halt new deposits, guide users to withdraw assets, and either transfer client funds to a licensed institution or begin an orderly wind-down.
The MiCA deadline is 17 days away. The action you need to take depends on which platform you currently use.
Three things to do before July 1:
Check your exchange's CASP status. ESMA maintains a public register of authorised firms at esma.europa.eu. Search your exchange name. If it appears, you're safe. If it doesn't, assume July 1 changes your access.
Move USDT balances now. EU clients holding USDT on a licensed platform must transfer to a compliant asset or a self-hosted wallet before 1 July 2026. Waiting until July 1 means competing with millions of users doing the same thing at the same time.
Do not ignore withdrawal notices. Unlicensed platforms are required to notify EU clients and give them time to withdraw. If you receive such a notice, act immediately. Some national regulators will block the websites of non-compliant platforms — which could lock you out of your funds.
The MiCA deadline affects non-EU exchanges too. MiCA's reverse-solicitation exception only covers clients who act on their own exclusive initiative, and ESMA's guidelines read "solicitation" broadly — ads, websites, apps, social media, retargeting, affiliate campaigns, influencers, SEO and sponsorships all count. A non-EU exchange marketing to EU users is treated as serving EU users.
Based on public market analyst sources and assumption basis only — no guaranteed outcomes the deadline will test whether Europe has one market or a patchwork of national approvals, blacklists, and last-minute transfers.</cite> All regulatory enforcement decisions rest with individual national regulators.
The MiCA deadline on July 1, 2026 is the most significant regulatory event in European crypto history. Only 194 firms are licensed. Three thousand were operating in 2024. Check your exchange on ESMA's register today. Move USDT if you hold any. Watch for withdrawal notices. The MiCA deadline does not wait — and neither should you.
YMYL Disclaimer
This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice, legal advice, or a recommendation regarding any specific crypto platform or asset. All deadline details are sourced from ESMA's official April 17, 2026 statement. Regulatory enforcement after July 1, 2026 rests with individual EU member state regulators — outcomes may vary by jurisdiction. USDT compliance status is based on Tether's confirmed decision not to seek EMT authorisation. Always verify your exchange's CASP status on the official ESMA register at esma.europa.eu. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk including total loss of capital.

