EU MiCA Regulation: 230 Licenses Issued Across Europe, Germany Leads Just 230 crypto firms received MiCA licenses across all of Europe — and after July 1, every unlicensed platform must stop
EU MiCA Regulation: 230 Licenses Issued Across Europe, Germany Leads
Just 230 crypto firms received MiCA licenses across all of Europe — and after July 1, every unlicensed platform must stop offering new services to EU users. If you hold funds on an exchange that didn't make the cut, your access, protections, and options may change overnight.
Here's what most reports aren't telling you — and why the country leading approvals isn't the one that started this race.
Europe's Crypto Reshuffle: The MiCA Deadline Is Here
The EU Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation reached its enforcement phase on July 1, 2026. Any crypto-asset service provider (CASP) without an official MiCA license is now barred from onboarding new customers or offering new services across the European Union.
This isn't a soft warning — it's a hard cutoff reshaping which platforms can legally operate in one of the world's largest financial markets.

Source: Wu Blockchain X
230 Licenses, One Clear Winner — and It Isn't France
Across the EU, approximately 230 MiCA CASP licenses have been issued as of late June 2026. Germany leads the bloc with 56 authorizations, followed by the Netherlands at 26 and France at 21. Malta (15), Cyprus (13), and Ireland (12) round out the top tier.
France's position is particularly notable. The country had long positioned itself as Europe's premier crypto hub, building an early registration framework to attract major players. But that ambition has stalled — some platforms actively chose Germany and the Netherlands, citing faster approvals and more predictable regulatory timelines.
40% of French Providers Never Applied
France's Financial Markets Authority confirmed that roughly 40% of registered crypto service providers in the country never submitted a MiCA license application. Some withdrew their applications midway. Others sought acquisition partners. A portion simply wound down operations.
This isn't a minor footnote. It signals a structural shift — the firms that survived are larger, better-resourced, and compliance-ready. Smaller operators are being squeezed out.

Source: HeyiBinance X
Binance, Spain, and the No-Extension Rule
Spain's National Securities Market Commission (CNMV) chair Carlos San Basilio confirmed no waivers or deadline extensions will be granted. Unlicensed platforms must stop processing new transactions immediately after July 1. Users on those platforms lose MiCA's investor protections the moment the deadline passes.
Binance is one of the high-profile names in focus. The exchange withdrew its MiCA license application in Greece and is now pursuing authorization in other EU member states. Binance Co-founder Yi He acknowledged the regulatory pressure, drawing parallels to the early struggles of Airbnb and Uber, and stated that Binance is working closely with EU and national regulators to advance compliance.
ESMA has called on unlicensed firms to halt new registrations, restrict activity to asset transfers and account closures, and communicate clear timelines to their customers.

Source: X
What This Means for Traders and Investors
If your platform is licensed, You are protected under MiCA's harmonized EU framework — dispute resolution, transparency requirements, and asset safeguards apply.
If your platform is unlicensed, You cannot receive new regulatory protections after July 1. Authorities are monitoring how firms handle customer assets during the transition and requiring formal exit plans.
Watch for: Exchange announcements on service restrictions for EU users in the coming days. Several platforms have already begun notifying users of upcoming limitations.
Conclusion
MiCA has done what it set out to do — create a regulated, resilient European crypto market. But the cost is diversity. With only 230 licenses issued and roughly 40% of French providers never applying, the market is consolidating fast around compliant, well-funded players.
For traders, the immediate priority is simple: confirm whether your exchange holds a valid MiCA CASP license before July 1 passes. The deadline is not moving. The platforms that didn't prepare may not be available much longer.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Crypto assets are highly volatile and involve significant risk. Always conduct your own research (DYOR) before making any investment decisions. CoinGabbar is not responsible for any financial losses.