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Policy

ESMA orders unauthorized crypto asset service providers to halt new EU clients

The European Securities and Markets Authority has ordered unauthorized crypto asset service providers to immediately stop onboarding new EU clients, marking the most decisive enforcement step

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 28, 2026
4 min read
NEWS
ESMA orders unauthorized crypto asset service providers to halt new EU clients
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

The European Securities and Markets Authority has ordered unauthorized crypto asset service providers to immediately stop onboarding new EU clients, marking the most decisive enforcement step yet as the MiCA transitional period nears its 1 July 2026 deadline.

ESMA issued the directive on 23 June 2026, stating that unauthorized CASPs must cease opening new client relationships or accounts and halt all marketing and solicitation activities directed at EU users. The order targets firms that have not secured authorization under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, the bloc's unified licensing framework that replaces fragmented national registration regimes across member states. For related coverage, see Y Combinator Sees Crypto Used by Every Portfolio Company.

The regulator specified that unauthorized providers may only continue offering services strictly necessary to sell or transfer crypto assets, reallocate holdings, or close open positions as part of an orderly wind-down. Custody services may persist only for the period required to complete that exit process, according to ESMA's public statement. For related coverage, see Truth Social's Three Crypto ETF Applications Withdrawn From SEC Review.

Clients of affected platforms must be informed clearly and repeatedly about wind-down timelines and automatic account closure deadlines.

What ESMA Ordered and Who It Targets

The order draws a hard line between authorized and unauthorized operators. Firms that obtained MiCA licenses can continue serving clients across the EU under a single passportable framework. Those without authorization face an immediate freeze on growth, restricted to managing existing client exits.

ESMA also reminded non-EU CASPs that, outside narrow reverse solicitation scenarios, they cannot provide MiCA-regulated services to EU clients or solicit EU business, including in a business-to-business context. This provision closes a potential workaround that offshore platforms might have used to maintain EU market access indirectly.

The action builds on ESMA's earlier 17 April 2026 statement, which confirmed that the MiCA transitional period expires across the EU on 1 July 2026. That statement made clear that any entity serving EU clients without a MiCA license after that date is in breach of EU law. Spain has already signaled it will not extend grace periods for unlicensed firms beyond the bloc-wide cutoff.

Why the Move Matters for the EU Crypto Market

The scale of disruption is significant. By May, only around 210 firms had obtained full MiCA authorization out of more than 1,200 crypto firms that previously held national registrations across the EU.

Authorised by May 210 of 1,200+ This gives the article a market-wide context stat for how many firms had actually converted to MiCA authorisation ahead of the bloc-wide cutoff.

That means roughly 80% of previously registered crypto firms face either exit or operational suspension in the EU. For users on unauthorized platforms, the immediate effect is a halt on new account creation and a forced migration of assets to licensed providers.

The enforcement action arrives amid a cautious broader crypto market. Bitcoin traded at $60,199 with the Fear & Greed Index sitting at 18, firmly in "Extreme Fear" territory. Public discussion has centered on late user notices from exchanges like Binance and the expected migration of EU client funds to licensed platforms ahead of the deadline.

What Comes Next for Unauthorized Crypto Providers

ESMA's Interim MiCA Register, which lists both authorized CASPs and non-compliant entities, was last updated on 26 June 2026. EU-based users can check the register to verify whether their crypto service provider holds a valid MiCA license.

ESMA register refresh 26 June 2026 Readers can verify whether a crypto firm appears in ESMA's Interim MiCA Register using the latest update noted in the research brief.

Unauthorized providers now face a narrow operational window. They must manage an orderly exit for existing clients while fully ceasing acquisition activities. Platforms that fail to comply after 1 July 2026 risk enforcement action from national competent authorities across the bloc.

The regulatory tightening in Europe contrasts with developments in other jurisdictions. Japan is pushing its own crypto regulatory framework with a focus on yen stablecoins and ETF rules, while the EU's approach prioritizes a unified licensing standard that could reshape which global platforms maintain a European presence.

For EU crypto users on affected platforms, the immediate steps are clear: check the ESMA register for your provider's authorization status, and if it is not listed, prepare to transfer assets to a licensed alternative before automatic closure deadlines take effect.

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