The MiCA deadline is 1 July. Manage Your Migration to a Regulated Exchange.
The EU's 18-month transitional period under MiCA expires on 1 July 2026. ESMA confirmed that there will be no extensions. European crypto users have less than two months to make sure they are using a MiCA regulated exchange.
What the MiCA deadline means for your account
MiCA came into force on 30 December 2024. Each EEA member state was given the option of a transitional period of up to 18 months to implement MiCA into local law. Those 18 months are now up and exchanges operating under the previous local registration regimes, or those still serving European users on their unregulated global platforms, must offboard their European users and stop operations in Europe.
From 1 July 2026, two types of exchange may be operating illegally in Europe. First, any exchange that continues to serve European users without a MiCA licence at all. Second, and this is the part many users don't realise, any exchange that holds a MiCA licence but continues to serve European users from its global, offshore entity rather than its MiCA-licenced entity in Europe. Having a MiCA licence somewhere in your corporate structure is not enough. Users need to be served by it.
If you're on either type of platform, your account should be restricted by an exchange really complying with EU regulatory requirements. The question is whether that happens on your timeline or theirs.
Why European users should move their assets before the deadline
Platforms that are planning an orderly exit from the European market should already be notifying their users. If you haven't heard from your exchange yet and you're not sure whether they hold a MiCA licence, or whether you're being served by it, that is itself a regulatory red flag. Don't wait for a last-minute rush notice. Managing your transition early allows for a more seamless experience and ensures you remain in full control of your migration timeline.
A MiCA-licenced exchange isn't just a regulatory checkbox. It means your funds are held in segregated accounts, the platform meets capital requirements, and it operates under the same consumer protection standards as any European regulated financial institution. That is a materially different level of protection than a global offshore platform, regardless of whether that platform has a MiCA licence sitting in a subsidiary somewhere. Moving now means you're in control. Waiting means you're not.
European users can trade on OKX, fully regulated in the EEA
OKX is MiCA-authorised and serves European users through its MiCA-licenced entity, OKX Europe Ltd. If you move your assets to OKX before 1 July, you secure access to a platform authorised to serve the EEA. You'll benefit from a robust suite of regulated services, including spot trading, staking, and regulated derivatives with leverage up to 10x for eligible traders, thanks to our MiFID license, all under European regulatory standards with the consumer protection that comes with them.
Check whether your current exchange holds a MiCA licence and, critically, whether you are being served by that licensed entity. If the answer to either question is no, you can secure your assets by creating an OKX account. Migrating early ensures a smooth transition to a platform that meets EU capital and custody requirements before the regulatory deadline.
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