Europe's transitional window for crypto licensing closes Jul. 1, pushing most unlicensed exchanges off the EU market as Tether's USDT (USDT) loses its last regulated foothold.
European regulators confirmed that the bloc's grace period for crypto firms expires Jul. 1, with no further extensions on the table. Only about 194 companies had secured a MiCA license by May 2026, against more than 3,000 that once held national registrations across the region. Supervisors expect roughly 75% of those older firms to lose the right to serve EU clients.
Tether's stablecoin, the world's largest at about $175 billion, sits at the center of the upheaval. Binance, Coinbase, Kraken and Crypto.com all pulled USDT for European users after the company declined to seek authorization.
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France has taken the hardest line of any member state. Its markets regulator warned that firms still serving EU customers without a license after the cutoff face criminal charges. Penalties run to two years in prison and a 30,000 euro fine, and the agency can blacklist offenders or ask courts to block their sites.
Marie-Anne Barbat-Layani, who chairs the authority, told reporters in May that companies had run out of road. Securing a license takes months of regulatory review, so any firm without one has effectively missed the window.
Circle's tokens stand to gain the most from the reshuffle. USDC (USDC) and its euro-pegged sibling EURC (EURC) are the only top-ten stablecoins with full MiCA clearance. Just 14 firms hold authorization to run trading platforms across the bloc, one of the framework's tightest categories.
Tether has refused to bend on the reserve rules behind its exit. Chief executive Paolo Ardoino has cited the requirement to park 60% of token reserves in European banks as incompatible with its model, and the firm has backed compliant issuers instead.
The squeeze on USDT has built for more than a year. Coinbase dropped it for European users in late 2024, Crypto.com followed in January 2025, and Binance and Kraken closed their spot markets in March 2025. The broader licensing cutoff now finishes a job the stablecoin delistings started.
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