TLDR
- The EU’s MiCA regulation deadline hits July 1, 2026, ending the transition period for crypto firms
- Only 194 out of 3,000+ crypto firms have secured licenses as of May 2026
- Around 75% of pre-MiCA providers are expected to lose their registration status
- France warned non-compliant firms face fines and up to two years in prison
- Users on unlicensed platforms may need to withdraw funds or move to approved providers
The European Union’s MiCA regulation transition period ends on July 1, 2026. After that date, any crypto exchange, broker, or wallet provider without a valid license must stop serving EU customers.
MiCA Transition Ends on July 1: Approximately 75% of EU Crypto Companies May Lose License
The EU’s MiCA transition period will end on July 1, after which crypto exchanges, brokers and wallet service providers without a MiCA license will no longer be able to serve EU users.
As… pic.twitter.com/WLR9qozwZ2
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) June 15, 2026
The scale of the problem is large. Over 3,000 crypto firms were registered across Europe in 2024. As of May 2026, only 194 had secured MiCA licenses. Law firm Hogan Lovells estimates around 75% of the pre-MiCA provider base will lose their registration status when the deadline hits.
The European Securities and Markets Authority has been clear. Any firm providing crypto services to EU clients without a license after July 1 will be breaking EU law and must shut down those operations.
What Happens to Unlicensed Firms
Firms that miss the deadline are expected to stop accepting new deposits immediately. They must also help existing customers withdraw assets, transfer funds, or move to a licensed platform or self-custody wallet.
ESMA has asked unlicensed providers to have “orderly wind-down plans” in place. Some regulators have gone further.
France’s financial regulator, the AMF, has issued one of the strongest warnings. Firms that continue serving French clients without a MiCA license after July 1 face a two-year prison sentence and a €30,000 fine. The AMF can also publish blacklists, warn the public, and seek court orders to block websites.
AMF president Marie-Anne Barbat-Layani told reporters it was “very, very urgent” for firms to complete their applications.
What This Means for Users
Not all users will be affected equally. Customers on already-licensed platforms should see little disruption.
But users on unlicensed platforms face a different situation. They may receive notices asking them to withdraw funds, sell positions, or move accounts to a licensed entity before the deadline.
An OKX Europe analysis found that 60% of European crypto users still use exchanges without MiCA authorization. It also found that 7.6 million out of 18.5 million exchange app downloads in Europe between May 2025 and May 2026 went to platforms without a valid license.
MiCA’s passporting system means a firm licensed in one EU country can operate across all 27 member states. But national approval speeds vary. Poland stalled a MiCA-aligned bill despite the EU deadline, while Italy set an earlier local deadline for registered providers.
The stablecoin sector has already shown how fast things can change. Tether’s USDT was removed from several European exchanges because it did not meet MiCA rules. Circle’s USDC and EURC, which do comply, continued operating.
Users are advised to check the ESMA Interim MiCA Register, read any notices from their platform, and move assets before access is cut off.







