A Regulatory Line in the Sand July 1, 2026 is the hard deadline for the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, and for Tether, the issuer of the world's largest stablecoin, it marks
A Regulatory Line in the Sand
July 1, 2026 is the hard deadline for the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, and for Tether, the issuer of the world's largest stablecoin, it marks an effective exit from Europe's regulated markets. Coinbase, Kraken, and Crypto(.)com EU have already restricted $USDT ahead of the deadline, with full removal from regulated platforms expected today.
Tether has not applied for MiCA authorization, a decision that reflects its broader focus on markets outside Europe. Under MiCA, stablecoin issuers must obtain e-money token (EMT) authorization to legally operate within the European Economic Area. Without it, exchanges cannot offer the token to EEA clients.
The key sticking point is MiCA's reserve requirement. As Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino stated in April 2026, the rule mandating that 60% of reserves be held in European bank deposits is fundamentally incompatible with how the company manages its backing. Tether has also discontinued its euro-denominated stablecoin, EURT, walking away from the European market entirely.
It is worth noting that MiCA does not ban individuals from holding USDT. The restriction applies to regulated exchanges and service providers, meaning European retail users can still technically access the token through non-custodial wallets or decentralized platforms, though the loss of regulated on-ramps and off-ramps makes it significantly less practical.
With USDT sidelined on regulated EU venues, Circle's $USDC is the primary beneficiary. Of the top ten stablecoins by market capitalization, $USDC is the only one that is MiCA-compliant. Circle secured an Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license through the French regulator ACPR, making $USDC and its euro-denominated counterpart EURC fully authorized for EU retail distribution.
Institutional players and regulated funds operating within the EEA now have little choice but to route demand through $USDC, as it is the only compliant option in that segment of the market. EU-resident retail traders have been moving balances into USDC and EURC ahead of the deadline.
For the broader stablecoin market, as Phemex Academy notes, this is "the largest forced reshuffle the stablecoin market has faced," splitting the two biggest issuers along a clean regulatory line. Whether other jurisdictions follow Europe's lead with similarly strict reserve frameworks will determine how much further Tether's global position is tested.
Sources:Crypto Briefing: Tether's USDT faces removal from EU platformsCircle Press Release: Circle is First Global Stablecoin Issuer to Comply with MiCAPhemex Academy: Why EU Exchanges Are Delisting Tether Before the July 1 MiCA Deadline