If you use crypto in Europe — buying, selling, transferring, or just holding it — there's a new set of rules that affects you. It's called MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation), and it's the EU's first comprehensive crypto law. It's been fully active since December 30, 2024.
This isn't about scaring you. Most of these changes are actually designed to protect you. But some of them change how you use exchanges, wallets, and stablecoins — so you need to know what's different.
The Big Picture: What MiCA Does for You
Before MiCA, crypto companies in Europe operated in a grey area. Some countries had rules, some didn't. If an exchange collapsed or stole your funds, there wasn't always a clear legal framework to help you. MiCA changes that:
- Licensed exchanges only — By July 1, 2026, every crypto exchange serving EU customers must have a CASP (Crypto-Asset Service Provider) license. Unlicensed platforms will be blocked
- Your crypto is protected — Exchanges must keep your assets separate from their own. If the company goes bankrupt, your crypto should be recoverable
- Transparent information — Before any new token is listed, the issuer must publish a clear white paper explaining what it is, the risks, and how it works
- Right to complain — CASPs must have proper complaints procedures, and you can escalate to national regulators
Buying and Selling Crypto: What Changes
If you buy or sell crypto on an EU-based exchange, here's what's different:
- KYC is mandatory — Every exchange must verify your identity. This was already common, but now it's a legal requirement with no exceptions
- Better pricing transparency — Exchanges must show you the actual price, fees, and any markup before you confirm a trade
- Best execution — When you place an order, the exchange must try to get you the best available price — similar to how stock brokers work
- Conflict of interest protections — Exchanges can't trade against you or give preferential treatment to certain clients without disclosure
Transferring Crypto: The Travel Rule
This is the biggest change for everyday users. Since December 30, 2024, the Travel Rule applies:
Sending Between Exchanges
When you send crypto from one exchange to another (e.g., Coinbase to Kraken), both platforms must share your identity information — your name and account details. This applies to every transfer, no matter how small. There is no minimum amount.
Sending to Your Own Private Wallet
If you withdraw crypto from an exchange to your own hardware wallet or software wallet:
- Under €1,000 — The exchange needs your standard KYC information (which they already have), but that's it
- €1,000 or more — The exchange must verify you actually own that wallet. They'll ask you to sign a message or provide proof of ownership. This is a one-time check per wallet address
Person-to-Person Transfers
If you send crypto directly from your own wallet to someone else's own wallet — without using an exchange in between — MiCA's Travel Rule does not apply. Peer-to-peer crypto transfers remain unregulated under MiCA.
Stablecoins: The USDT Problem
This is the change that has caught the most people off guard. Under MiCA, stablecoin issuers need specific authorization to operate in the EU. Tether (USDT) has not applied for this authorization.
What this means for you:
- EU exchanges have been removing USDT — Major platforms like Crypto.com and Bitstamp stopped offering USDT trading pairs in early 2025
- You can still hold USDT — The ban is on exchanges listing USDT, not on you owning it. If USDT is in your private wallet, nothing changes
- USDC is fine — Circle (USDC issuer) has obtained MiCA authorization. USDC remains fully available on EU exchanges
- Other MiCA-compliant stablecoins — Euro-denominated stablecoins like EURC are being promoted as alternatives
If you regularly use USDT on EU exchanges, switch to USDC or convert before trading on EU platforms.
Taxes and Reporting
MiCA itself does not set tax rules — taxation is still handled by each country individually. However, MiCA does require exchanges to keep detailed records of all your transactions, which means:
- Tax authorities will have easier access to your trading history through your exchange
- Exchanges may share data with tax authorities under separate EU directives (like DAC8, which specifically covers crypto tax reporting and takes effect in 2026)
- If you use a regulated EU exchange, assume your trading activity is reportable
This doesn't change your tax obligations — you were always supposed to report crypto gains. But it does mean it's harder to fly under the radar.
What About DeFi, NFTs, and Gaming Tokens?
- DeFi — Truly decentralized protocols (with no identifiable service provider) are currently outside MiCA's scope. But the EU has signalled it will revisit this in future legislation
- NFTs — Unique NFTs are generally excluded from MiCA. However, if NFTs are issued in large series or function like financial instruments, they may fall under the regulation
- Casino/gaming tokens — In-game currencies and gambling-specific tokens are generally not covered by MiCA unless they function as transferable crypto-assets. Each case depends on the specific token's characteristics
How to Check If Your Exchange Is Compliant
ESMA (European Securities and Markets Authority) maintains a register of authorized CASPs. By mid-2026, this will be fully integrated into their systems. Until then:
- Check if your exchange mentions MiCA authorization on their website
- Look for the national regulator's seal (e.g., BaFin in Germany, AMF in France, CNMV in Spain)
- If an exchange serves EU customers but has no MiCA license and no grandfathering period, be cautious
Quick Summary: What You Need to Do
| Using USDT on an EU exchange? | Switch to USDC or another MiCA-compliant stablecoin |
| Withdrawing €1,000+ to your wallet? | Be ready to verify wallet ownership (one-time per address) |
| Sending crypto wallet-to-wallet? | No change — MiCA doesn't cover P2P transfers |
| Worried about taxes? | Your exchange will likely report your activity. Keep records |
| Using an unlicensed exchange? | Check their MiCA status before July 2026 |
Source: Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 — Official Journal of the European Union. Consumer guidance from ESMA.