The transition period for MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation) ends on July 1, 2026. According to a report by German outlet BTC-ECHO, only 14 crypto trading platforms across the entire EU have so far obtained the CASP (Crypto-Asset Service Provider) license required under MiCA. Once the transition period ends, unlicensed platforms will in principle no longer be permitted to offer regulated crypto services to retail users in EU member states. This means many exchanges still operating under national “grace period” arrangements will face a real choice starting in July: suspend operations, relocate, or restrict EU users.
What this news means for EU USDT card users
Two things need to be separated first: the deposit pathway and the spending pathway.
This MiCA deadline directly tightens the exchange side—the platforms you use to buy USDT, convert fiat into stablecoins, or withdraw stablecoins to a card platform. If you’ve been relying on a small, unlicensed exchange that’s been holding on through the transition period, this pathway could suddenly become unavailable starting in July: withdrawals restricted, euro on/off-ramps cut, or accounts even frozen pending migration.
The card spending side—using Wirex, Crypto.com Visa, or a BitPay card at a merchant—relies on the Visa/Mastercard clearing network and licensed card issuers (mostly EMIs, or e-money institutions), and is not directly affected by this list of 14. In other words: whether the balance on your card can be spent has little to do with this list of 14; whether you can smoothly top up your card with USDT has a lot to do with it.
Expected timeline:
- Within 7 days: The licensed platform list may expand slightly further, with some platforms announcing “license obtained/migration in progress.” It’s worth checking whether the platform you use for deposits is on the list.
- Within 30 days: Restrictions on EU users at unlicensed platforms will roll out progressively, with euro SEPA channels likely to tighten first.
- Within 90 days: Stablecoin deposits will further concentrate at large licensed exchanges, narrowing practical choices for retail users but improving regulatory clarity.
Users on Asia-Pacific rails (for example, those using an Asia-BIN virtual card like MPCard) are less affected, since their top-up and card-issuing pathways fall outside MiCA’s scope—but if you’re based in the EU and top up using an EU identity and IP, you should still pay attention to the compliance status of the exchange you use.
Comparing this to 2023 and 2024
What’s similar: Like the wave triggered by the MiCA stablecoin provisions (Title III/IV) taking effect on June 30, 2024, the market is once again entering a “compliance rush before the deadline”—platforms scrambling for licenses, users scrambling to confirm the safety of their funds. USDT being delisted or restricted on some EU exchanges back then was a preview of this same dynamic.
What’s different: The 2024 wave was mainly about stablecoin issuers (Tether, the issuer of USDT, had not obtained EMT authorization, prompting some platforms to voluntarily delist USDT trading pairs in the eurozone). This July 1 deadline targets the operating qualification of the platforms themselves—not whether a particular token can be traded, but whether the exchange can legally operate in the EU at all.
Going further back, the brief USDC depeg in March 2023 was a market credibility event, resolved through reserve transparency; MiCA, by contrast, is a structural regulatory event—there’s no “recovery,” only “comply or exit.” For users, the former tests which stablecoin you choose; the latter tests which platform you choose.
Regulatory boundaries: what’s allowed now, what isn’t
The current compliance boundary for stablecoins in the EU is roughly as follows:
- Clearly permitted: Trading and holding stablecoins with MiCA EMT/ART authorization through a licensed CASP platform.
- Gray area: Self-custody USDT transfers between personal wallets, and existing balances held on unlicensed platforms—MiCA does not prohibit you from “holding” USDT, but it does restrict platforms from “providing you services.”
- Moving toward prohibition: Unlicensed platforms continuing to offer regulated services to EU retail users after July.
The pace of enforcement will vary by member state. For the overall EU framework, see our EU compliance guide; for comparison, UK compliance follows an independent post-Brexit path and does not directly apply MiCA—the two should not be conflated. The official MiCA text and CASP licensing progress can be tracked on the ESMA official page.
Milestones worth watching next
- July 1, 2026: The transition period officially ends. Watch for the final licensed lists published by each member state’s regulator (e.g., Germany’s BaFin, France’s AMF) on that day.
- How fast the licensed list grows beyond 14: The longer the list, the more deposit options retail users have; if it stays in the low double digits for long, fund concentration will rise significantly.
- The survival of euro USDT trading pairs: Watch whether large licensed exchanges keep USDT/EUR pairs, or shift further toward EMT-authorized stablecoins.
- SEPA channel announcements: Cutoffs of euro on/off-ramps at unlicensed platforms tend to arrive earlier and more abruptly than the removal of trading features.
Editorial recommendations
- EU users holding a Wirex / Crypto.com Visa / BitPay card: Spending existing card balances is not affected for now, and no urgent action is needed. But confirm before July 1 whether your deposit exchange is on the MiCA licensed list.
- Users with funds still sitting on small, unlicensed exchanges: Consider moving usable funds to a licensed platform or self-custody wallet before the end of June, to avoid accounts being frozen pending migration after the deadline.
- Users planning to apply for a new EU USDT card: There’s no need to delay applying now (card issuance is not affected), but prioritize large, licensed exchanges for deposits—see our best cards for EU residents for reference.
- Users not based in the EU, on Asia-Pacific rails: This deadline has limited impact on you and requires no action.
The bottom line: this is a reshuffling of platform qualifications, not a crisis for the money on your card. Switching your deposit channel to a compliant platform is the only action this news actually requires of you.