Key Takeaways
- Regulators require unauthorized crypto platforms to stop serving EEA customers from July 1, with no grace period or interim status.
- Only a limited share of previously registered firms secured approval, leaving many platforms facing service suspensions or exits.
- The cutoff has increased pressure as firms seek authorization while users assess which platforms will remain accessible.
EU Crypto Firms Face Final Countdown to MiCA Authorization Deadline
Crypto companies operating in the European Economic Area (EEA) face a July 1, 2026, enforcement deadline under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA). From that date, platforms offering crypto services without MiCA authorization must stop serving clients across the bloc.
European regulators have treated the deadline as final. The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has confirmed there will be no extension, and firms awaiting approval cannot continue operating under a temporary or “pending” status.
“July 1, 2026 is the hard enforcement deadline across the European Economic Area,” Kraken Institutional explained on June 23, adding:
“After that date, any entity providing crypto-asset services to EU clients without a MiCA license is in breach of EU law and must stop.”
“Critically, there is no intermediate or “pending” status: a firm is either authorized or it is not,” the crypto platform stated. Kraken said it is authorized under MiCA through the Central Bank of Ireland, allowing the platform to continue serving EU clients after the July 1 deadline.
Licensing progress has not been uniform across the European Union, with some member states already granting CASP approvals while others have yet to issue any licenses. This uneven rollout could force some platforms to suspend services or restrict access in markets where authorization is not in place.
MiCA Creates Common Rules for Custody, Trading, and Client Protection
MiCA creates a single regulatory framework for crypto-asset service providers across the EU, replacing national rules and covering custody, trading, exchange services, and order execution. The regulation also creates passporting rights, allowing licensed firms to operate across all EU member states from one authorization.
Authorized firms must meet requirements on client asset segregation, capital reserves, governance, and ongoing supervision. Custody providers must keep client assets legally separate from company funds under regulated structures.
The July 1 cutoff ends a transition period that allowed firms to operate under national registrations. More than 1,200 companies held these approvals, but only a small share have secured full Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP) authorization.
Kraken Institutional emphasized:
“The pressure on the market is real. Of the more than 1,200 firms that held pre-MiCA national registrations across the bloc, only a small share have converted to full CASP authorization, and several member states have not issued a single license.”
For users, the practical issue is whether their exchange, custodian, or trading venue will remain available after enforcement begins. Platforms without authorization may need to pause covered services until regulators approve their applications.



