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Wednesday, July 1, 2026 · 66 days away
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EU MiCA Transitional Period Ends
Event overview
Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) Regulation transitional period ends; CASPs without authorization must wind down operations.
The end of the transitional regime under the EU Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) on Wednesday 1 July 2026. From that date, any crypto-asset service provider operating in the European Union must hold a full MiCA authorisation as a CASP from a national competent authority; firms still relying on national grandfathering arrangements lose the right to provide services and must wind down or migrate clients to authorised entities.
MiCA — Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 — entered into force on 29 June 2023 and applied in stages: Titles III and IV (asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens, including stablecoins) from 30 June 2024, and the rest of the regulation including the CASP regime from 30 December 2024. Article 143 then granted EU Member States the option to provide a transitional period of up to 18 months for crypto-asset service providers that were already operating under existing national regimes before 30 December 2024. That transitional window — sometimes referred to as the "grandfathering" or "national pass" period — varies in length by Member State, but the EU-wide hard ceiling expires 1 July 2026.
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) recommended in October 2024 that Member States limit the transitional period to no more than 12 months; the European Commission and ESMA have since published Q&As clarifying that, irrespective of national choice, no national transitional regime may extend beyond 1 July 2026. Member States that opted for shorter periods include the Netherlands (six months) and Lithuania (five months); France, Germany, Italy and Spain run closer to the full 18-month maximum. National competent authorities must publish lists of authorised CASPs; ESMA maintains a consolidated EU register.
After 1 July 2026, only fully MiCA-authorised CASPs may legally offer crypto-asset services to EU clients on the basis of a single authorisation passportable across the bloc. Services covered include exchanges, custody and administration, transfer services, advice on crypto-assets, portfolio management, placement, reception and transmission of orders, and crypto-asset trading platforms. Firms that have not secured authorisation by their relevant national deadline must cease activity, transfer existing client positions to an authorised provider, or restructure operations outside the EU. Stablecoin issuers that have not authorised their ART or EMT under Title III/IV must already have ceased issuance and outstanding tokens face restrictions on EU offering. Travel-rule and AML obligations under TFR (Regulation 2023/1113) are already in force.
Primary sources are the European Commission's Finance DG (finance.ec.europa.eu), the European Securities and Markets Authority (esma.europa.eu) Q&A and CASP register, and the European Banking Authority (eba.europa.eu) for ART/EMT supervisory work. National competent authorities — BaFin (Germany), AMF (France), Banca d'Italia, CySEC (Cyprus), Finansinspektionen (Sweden), Bank of Lithuania, AFM/DNB (Netherlands), CNMV (Spain) — publish their own dashboards. Trade-press coverage runs through CoinDesk, The Block, MLex, Bloomberg, Reuters and Politico Europe. The EU Official Journal posts delegated and implementing acts as they are adopted.
MiCA's transitional close sits inside a wider 2026 EU regulatory wave that includes EU AI Act enforcement, the DMA first review, the EU CBAM first cert surrender, and the EU Data Act design obligations. The longer arc continues with the EU AI Act phase 2 milestones in 2027.
When does MiCA's transitional period end? Wednesday 1 July 2026 — the EU-wide hard ceiling under Article 143. Where does it apply? All 27 EU Member States, plus the EEA states (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway) once they incorporate MiCA into the EEA Agreement. Why does the MiCA transitional end matter? It is the cliff-edge after which no EU crypto-asset services may be provided without a full MiCA authorisation, ending the patchwork of national grandfathering regimes. Who supervises MiCA? National competent authorities in each Member State, with ESMA, EBA and the Commission overseeing convergence and the consolidated register.
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