MiCA Deadline Forces EU Crypto Firms To Choose Licences Or Exit
CoinDesk reported that the EU’s MiCA framework is now fully in force, requiring crypto firms serving the 27-nation bloc to hold a licence or stop operating. Industry lawyers and executives said the rulebook improves clarity, but warned that compliance costs could shrink roughly 3,000 registered providers to 300 or 400 licensed firms.

MiCA Licence Deadline Takes Effect
CoinDesk reported that the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets framework is now fully in force, requiring crypto firms that serve customers across the 27-nation bloc to hold a MiCA licence or stop operating.
The rule change replaces registration and transition periods with a licensing regime for crypto asset service providers.
The framework gives the bloc a common rulebook for transparency, consumer protection and supervision, while the deadline creates a sharper market-access test for exchanges, brokers and other providers.
The report said thousands of crypto service providers face suspension if they continue serving EU customers without authorisation.
The deadline is now a compliance event as well as a market-structure event: firms need documented governance, operations and supervisory approval, not only user demand.
Lawyers Warn Smaller Providers Could Drop Out
Joseph Borg, a Maltese lawyer and WH Partners partner who has advised crypto firms since 2016, said European-level crypto regulation is positive and necessary.
He also warned that supervisory practice could narrow the market.
Borg said MiCA could leave Europe with 300 or 400 licensed providers, compared with roughly 3,000 registered crypto asset service providers before full licensing.
He said that would be a problem if it results from supervisors preferring a smaller number of operators rather than investing in more technology and staff to oversee the market.
The cost burden is not only legal paperwork.
Borg said technical standards and supervisory expectations can favour companies with larger legal and compliance teams.
That leaves startups exposed if they cannot fund licence work, governance documentation and continuing oversight.
Licensed Exchanges Want Offshore Enforcement
SwissBorg chief partnership officer Alex Fazel took a different view of the licensing test.
He said transparency is central to trust and that a MiCA licence is earned by documenting governance, compliance procedures and operations, not simply by having money and power.
Fazel still acknowledged that startups face the hardest financing burden because obtaining and maintaining a licence requires significant capital.
His position captures the split across the industry: larger or better-prepared firms can treat MiCA as proof of operating discipline, while smaller firms may see the same framework as a barrier to entry.
Gate Group founder and CEO Lin Han said licensed exchanges have spent years preparing for MiCA and need all competitors to follow the same rule.
ESMA has warned that firms serving EU clients without MiCA authorisation are breaching EU law and should stop offering those services.
The enforcement record remains incomplete.
ESMA did not identify how many offshore crypto firms it has forced to stop serving EU clients under MiCA.
















