The European Union’s crypto industry is approaching a major regulatory milestone as the transition period under the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework expires on July 1, 2026. After this date, crypto-asset service providers must hold a MiCA license to legally offer services across the EU.
The deadline could have a far-reaching impact on the industry. While more than 3,000 crypto companies were registered across Europe in 2024, only 194 firms had obtained MiCA authorization by May 2026.
This means a large number of companies risk losing access to EU customers if they fail to secure approval before the cutoff date.
European regulators have made it clear that there will be no extension of the transition period. Firms operating without authorization after July 1 may be required to stop serving EU clients and could face significant penalties.
Smaller operators have struggled with the high costs and compliance requirements associated with obtaining a license, while larger exchanges have been better positioned to meet regulatory standards.
MiCA introduces a passporting system that allows licensed firms to operate across all 27 EU member states under a single authorization. As unlicensed firms exit or suspend operations, licensed platforms are expected to gain market share.
The deadline is being closely watched globally as a key test of comprehensive crypto regulation.
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.
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— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) June 15, 2026
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