Europe’s crypto market is facing its most consequential regulatory moment yet. The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has issued a direct order to unauthorized crypto-asset service providers operating across the EU: stop taking on new clients, halt all marketing to European customers, and begin winding down immediately. The MiCA authorization deadline of July 1, 2026 is here, and there are no extensions.
The scale of the problem is hard to overstate. Europe was estimated to have had more than 3,000 registered virtual asset service providers (VASPs) as of 2024 — Poland alone accounted for over 1,400 of those registrations. Fast forward to the July 1 deadline, and only around 244 firms hold MiCA authorization. That means roughly 80% of the pre-MiCA crypto ecosystem faces probable closure or forced restructuring.
Erald Ghoos, CEO of OKX Europe, put it plainly: “I estimate that 80% of the crypto players won’t survive after MiCA. It’s not only because of MiCA itself, it’s because of the whole width and heaviness of the European regulatory burden.” He noted that obtaining a MiCA license is only the beginning — firms that want to process stablecoins also need a Payment Institution or Electronic Money Institution license on top of that.
The human cost is significant too. Alex Fazel, chief partnership officer at SwissBorg, estimated that more than 10 million users across the EU now face disruption as their current platforms halt or restrict services. That is a lot of people suddenly searching for a compliant alternative.
ESMA’s June 23 public statement left no ambiguity. Unauthorized crypto-asset service providers must immediately stop onboarding new clients. All marketing activities aimed at EU customers must cease. What remains permissible is strictly limited: facilitating asset transfers, closing accounts, and ensuring customers can move to licensed providers. Nothing more.
This is a hard stop, not a soft landing. The MiCA transitional period, which gave existing operators time to secure authorization, officially expired on July 1. Lavan Thasarathakumar, a senior adviser at Hogan Lovells, was unambiguous about the consequences: “Any regulator, jurisdiction, or member states allowing firms to continue to operate under their existing national law would be deemed in breach of EU regulations.”
The actual enforcement of non-compliance falls to national competent authorities across all 27 EU member states — and that introduces real variation. Legal experts at Hogan Lovells, who co-authored a report on the MiCA transition, hold genuinely differing views on how strictly individual countries will act. John Salmon, a partner at the firm, acknowledged that “none of us know what’s going to happen” and that each country will likely take a different approach. Some jurisdictions have been slow to finalize their own implementing legislation, which complicates enforcement timelines.
What that uneven enforcement landscape means in practice is that some operators may face immediate action while others encounter more lenient treatment depending on their home jurisdiction. France, Italy, and Austria previously called on ESMA to take tighter control of how member states administer MiCA, a signal that regulatory divergence was already a concern before the deadline arrived.
The numbers tell a stark story about how difficult MiCA compliance has proven to be. Out of over 1,200 entities that were actively registered as crypto-asset service providers, only 210 to 244 have secured full MiCA authorization — a conversion rate of roughly 17% to 20%. That gap is not simply a matter of firms choosing not to comply; it reflects the substantial cost and complexity involved.
Patrick Gruhn, founder and CEO of Perpetuals.com Ltd., broke down the economics. The locked capital required for a MiCA spot license sits between 50,000 euros and 150,000 euros by class — relatively manageable. But the licensing process itself can cost as much as 700,000 euros in the first year and around 250,000 euros annually thereafter for a lean firm. For large exchanges, costs can run into the millions. Gruhn estimated a timeline of 12 to 24 months to the first authorized trade, with roughly 100,000 euros in legal fees alone.
That cost structure effectively prices out smaller players. Several firms reportedly approached OKX Europe asking to be acquired simply because they could not afford compliance, according to Ghoos. BitGo Europe, authorized by Germany’s BaFin, offered one partial solution: firms could migrate their clients’ wallets into BitGo’s regulated custody rather than navigate MiCA’s full requirements independently. Mike Belshe, BitGo’s CEO, described the overall situation — with only a 17% conversion rate — as something that “feels like a setback,” particularly given growing institutional momentum across the continent.
For everyday crypto users, the stakes are concrete. Clients of unauthorized firms lose access to the specific investor protections that MiCA-licensed providers are legally required to implement.
Those protections include:
ESMA has been direct in advising consumers to check the official ESMA register to verify whether their provider holds valid MiCA authorization. If a provider isn’t listed, the message is clear: transfer assets to a compliant platform now, not after July 1 has passed.
Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange by trading volume, became the most prominent casualty of the pre-deadline pressure. The exchange withdrew its MiCA license application in Greece and announced service limitations across multiple EU countries. Rather than exiting Europe entirely, Binance has signaled plans to reapply for a MiCA license through another EU member state — essentially rerouting its European strategy through a more favorable jurisdiction.
The move is a calculated repositioning rather than a retreat. By choosing a different national regulator to process its application, Binance is betting on the variation in how individual member states administer MiCA. Mateusz Kara, CEO of Morphic Financial Group, described the broader competitive dynamic bluntly: “The European market will be consolidated by the bigger players, and we already see that happening.” The situation in Poland, where Morphic operates and where thousands of VASP entities face closure, illustrates exactly that consolidation. According to Kara, his firm holds the only MiCA license currently issued in Poland.
The irony of the MiCA framework is that its compliance burden — designed to protect investors — may end up concentrating the European crypto market into fewer, larger hands. Smaller and mid-size exchanges that cannot absorb the cost of authorization are folding or seeking acquisition. The firms that survive will inherit a far less crowded field and the institutional credibility that comes with a pan-European license. Whether that consolidation ultimately serves European crypto users, or simply reduces their choices, is the question regulators will face long after July 1 has passed.
They must immediately stop onboarding new clients and marketing to EU customers. All remaining operations are limited strictly to orderly wind-down activities, including facilitating asset transfers and closing customer accounts.
Consumers should check the official ESMA register, which lists all firms that have received full MiCA authorization. If a provider does not appear on that register, clients should consider transferring their assets to a compliant, authorized platform.
Licensed firms must implement asset segregation — keeping customer funds separate from company capital — along with investor compensation schemes and strict disclosure requirements covering fees, risks, and operational practices.
Binance withdrew its MiCA license application in Greece and limited services across several EU countries. The exchange has not abandoned the European market; it plans to reapply for a MiCA license through another EU member state as part of a revised compliance strategy.
Article produced with the assistance of artificial intelligence and reviewed by the editorial team.


