
Binance will stop serving EU clients from next week after missing the MiCA licence deadline. The exchange plans to reapply through France.
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Binance will stop serving clients in the European Union from next week. The exchange failed to secure a Markets in Crypto-Assets licence before the July 1 deadline, the Financial Times reported.
The cutoff ends the bloc's transition period for crypto asset service providers. Customers in Poland, Italy, Spain and France received emails telling them how to withdraw funds, the FT said. Binance said some users may be affected before July 1. The exchange added it is not asking users to withdraw by that date and that user assets remain safe.
Binance had applied in Greece for a licence that would allow it to serve clients across the EU. The FT reported that the application was rejected last week. Binance said it did not receive a formal decision and took the decision to withdraw the Greek application.
In a company update, Binance said, “Your assets remain safe and secure, and will remain accessible at all times.” The exchange also said it will seek authorization in another EU member state. The FT reported that Binance now plans to apply through France.
Binance had already been seeking another EU approval pathway before the MiCA cutoff. The company said at the time that it remained committed to Europe and wanted to avoid disruption for users.
MiCA creates a single crypto rulebook across the EU. From July 1, crypto firms need approval from a member state regulator to keep serving users across the bloc. The European Securities and Markets Authority has warned users that not all providers will be authorized after that date.
In its statement on the end of the MiCA transition period, ESMA said users should check whether their provider is listed as authorized. It also said firms without approval must stop offering services and manage any wind-down in an orderly way.
The rulebook gives approved firms access to the full EU market. It also raises the cost of compliance.
The setback comes as other exchanges move ahead with EU licences. Coinbase opened its Luxembourg MiCA hub before the deadline. Other firms, including OKX, Bitpanda and Crypto.com, have also worked to secure regulated access in Europe.
Binance’s wider record remains under review by regulators. The exchange paid more than $4.3b to U.S. authorities in 2023 after pleading guilty to charges tied to money laundering controls and sanctions breaches. Founder Changpeng Zhao stepped down as chief executive and later served a four-month prison sentence.
Binance said Europe remains important to its long-term plan. “We are confident we will secure a MiCA licence in the coming months,” it said. Until then, the exchange faces a gap in EU service access as the bloc’s new crypto regime takes full effect.
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