Filing taxes. Renewing a passport the week before a flight. We all procrastinate on some of the more important items in life. That mantra in the back of your head saying “I should really deal with that.”
For Europe’s crypto users, that thing is their portfolio, and the deadline is July 1st. The grace period for the EU’s big crypto law (MiCA, short for Markets in Crypto-Assets) runs out. After that, any exchange serving people in the EU without a MiCA licence isn’t in a grey area anymore. It’s just breaking the law. ESMA, the EU’s markets regulator, has been blunt about it: no more extensions.
The numbers are brutal
More than 3,000 crypto firms used to operate across Europe under the old, messy patchwork of national rules. Only a fraction have made it through and are listed as obtaining full regulatory approval. Everyone else is left with a short list of options: get licensed in a hurry, wind business down, hand their users over to someone who did get licensed, or just stop serving Europe altogether.
It’s no better on the user side. One analysis flagged by OKX Europe looked at 18.5 million downloads of crypto apps in Europe over the past year and found roughly 7.6 million of them, about 41%, went to apps that aren’t on the MiCA-approved register. Nearly one in two new downloads pointing at platforms that might have to switch off the lights in the EU.
A lot of people are about to go looking for somewhere new to put their money.
The big name on the chopping block
The most dramatic name in all this is also the most familiar one. Binance, the largest exchange around, applied for its MiCA licence back in January, going through Greece, which it had talked up as its preferred home base in Europe.
But on June 17th, Reuters reported that Greece’s regulator was leaning toward rejecting the application. And because of how MiCA works, a “no” in Greece means a “no” across all 27 countries at once.
Binance said its application was compliant, that the review went fine, and it promised users a proper update before June 30th. The next week will be crucial for Binance, but their users may want to get out before as they could be left high and dry come July 1st.
European Platform for European Users
If you’re one of the millions of Europeans affected by the deadline, the safest option is to move your assets to a licensed European exchange. It’s simple: the firms best positioned for the MiCA era are the ones that have already secured approval and built their businesses around Europe’s regulatory framework. Don’t keep your funds locked in platforms that are scrambling to meet requirements at the last minute.
SwissBorg is one platform that has been aggressive in their positioning, messaging, and structure to fit the European market. The company secured its MiCA authorization through France’s AMF, one of Europe’s most respected and demanding financial regulators. Many firms are chasing regulatory arbitrage, where firms seek approval through easier jurisdictions like Malta or Cyprus, but the regulator behind the license is an important quality signal. Other strong European options include Bitpanda, licensed through Germany’s BaFin, as well as Coinhouse and Bitvavo, all of which have secured approval to operate under MiCA.
Before moving funds, take a few minutes to verify any platform through ESMA and confirm which licensed entity will actually hold your account. The deadline isn’t something to wait for. Moving to a fully regulated European exchange now will save a lot of headaches later.