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Policy

EBA Crypto Fines Under MiCA: New EU Rules Explained

The European Banking Authority has published a draft methodology for calculating fines against crypto firms under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, giving exchanges and token issuers t

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 28, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
EBA Crypto Fines Under MiCA: New EU Rules Explained
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

The European Banking Authority has published a draft methodology for calculating fines against crypto firms under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, giving exchanges and token issuers their first detailed look at how EU enforcers plan to set financial penalties.

What the EBA actually outlined on MiCA fines

The EBA opened a public consultation on its draft methodology for setting fines under MiCA. The framework covers issuers of asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens that fall under the EBA's direct supervisory remit. For related coverage, see Spain Rejects MiCA Extension for Non-Compliant Crypto Firms.

The methodology is not yet final. It is a draft regulatory technical standard open for industry feedback, meaning the exact calibration of penalties could shift before adoption. The EBA's rulemaking page provides the full consultation document and timeline for responses. For related coverage, see Ethereum Foundation to Cut Budget 40% and Shift to Long-Term Endowment Model.

MiCA, which entered full application across the EU in late 2024, gave European regulators broad authority to impose fines on non-compliant crypto-asset service providers. Until now, the specific method for calculating those fines had not been formally detailed by the EBA.

Why the fine framework matters for crypto compliance

A defined penalty methodology changes the compliance calculus for any firm operating in or serving EU customers. Without it, companies faced regulatory risk they could not quantify. With it, legal and compliance teams can model worst-case exposure and allocate resources accordingly.

This is a regulatory operations story, not a market-moving event. The draft does not introduce new prohibitions or licensing requirements. It fills a procedural gap in MiCA's enforcement architecture, one that matters most to compliance officers and in-house counsel at crypto firms with EU exposure.

The development follows a pattern of EU member states tightening MiCA enforcement. Spain recently refused to extend transition periods for unlicensed crypto firms, signaling that national regulators are not inclined to offer leniency. Meanwhile, ESMA has ordered unauthorized crypto service providers to stop onboarding new EU clients, adding enforcement pressure from the securities side.

Other EU member states are also advancing their own crypto regulatory frameworks. Poland's parliament recently passed a revised crypto bill, reflecting the bloc-wide push to operationalize MiCA at the national level.

What Southeast Asian platforms should watch next

For crypto exchanges and issuers based in Southeast Asia, the EBA's fine methodology matters if they serve European users or plan to expand into the EU market. MiCA compliance is not optional for firms that touch EU customers, regardless of where they are headquartered.

Several major ASEAN-based exchanges operate globally and would fall under MiCA's scope if they serve EU-resident clients. The fine methodology gives these platforms a concrete input for their cross-border compliance budgets.

The next milestone to watch is the close of the EBA's consultation period, after which the authority will review feedback and publish the final regulatory technical standard. Firms with EU exposure should track that timeline to ensure their compliance frameworks align before enforcement begins in earnest.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

Read original article on kanalcoin.com