BRUSSELS, BELGIUM / EuroWire / – The European Union’s crypto rulebook is entering its decisive stage as the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation moves from national transition periods to a single licensing system. From July 1, 2026, crypto-asset service providers serving clients in the bloc must hold MiCA authorization. Firms without approval must stop offering covered services to customers in the 27-country market.

The change replaces a patchwork of national crypto registrations with one framework for authorization, supervision and passporting. A licensed provider can use its home-state approval to serve clients across the bloc after the required notification process. The European Securities and Markets Authority has told unauthorised firms to complete orderly wind-down plans by the deadline.
MiCA covers crypto exchanges, custody firms, trading platforms and other providers that offer crypto-asset services on a professional basis. The regulation also sets rules for issuers of crypto-assets, including asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens. Stablecoin provisions began applying in June 2024, while broader service-provider rules applied from December 2024.
Single rulebook replaces national regimes
The licensing gap has made the reset visible. Market trackers using official register data counted roughly 210 authorized crypto-asset service providers by May 2026. That compares with more than 1,200 firms that previously held national crypto registrations across the wider European market. The difference leaves hundreds of firms without the approval needed to continue serving clients after the transition ends.
The rules require authorized providers to meet governance, disclosure, capital, safeguarding and conduct standards. MiCA also bars market abuse and requires clear information for clients and token holders. National regulators review applications, grant authorizations and supervise firms under the common framework. The European passport then links those national decisions to market access across member states.
Clients told to check provider status
Consumers also face practical changes. Official guidance urges clients to check whether their provider appears on the interim MiCA register. The protection applies to the specific authorized legal entity, not every company using the same brand. That point matters for global crypto groups that operate through several entities inside and outside Europe.
The European Banking Authority oversees parts of the MiCA framework linked to significant asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens. The wider deadline marks the end of Europe’s grace period for legacy crypto businesses. It also gives the bloc a single legal structure for crypto trading, custody, issuance and client protection under one market rulebook.
