EU to Review MiCA, as 80% of Crypto Firms Vanish in Compliance Cull

Thursday, 21/05/2026 | 18:00 GMT by Adonis Adoni
  • In Cyprus, only 12 CASPs have secured authorisation out of 200 total across the EU.
  • High compliance costs and Tether's absence should emerge as key hot buttons.
EU flags in front of the European Commission headquarters in Belgium
EU flags in front of the European Commission headquarters in Belgium (shutterstock)

The European Commission has a long-standing habit of checking its own homework and MiCA is next up on the docket. On Tuesday, Brussels launched a formal consultation to gather feedback on the functioning of the Regulation.

For the stakeholders involved, the exchanges, the issuers, and the industry associations, this is an invitation to revisit the battlefield.

As the grandfathering period for MiCA approaches its end on July 1, the preliminary results suggest that the compliance cull has been deep.

In the years preceding MiCA’s implementation, the European crypto sector was a fragmented but vast ecosystem. Industry estimates suggest that between 1,100 and 1,300 cryptoasset service providers (CASPs) were active across the union, operating under a patchwork of national regimes.

Today, that number has effectively collapsed. As of May, only 200 CASPs have been authorised under the new harmonised rules.

In Cyprus, only 12 entities have secured authorisation. Tellingly, seven of these are not crypto-native companies but established retail brokers, such as Capital.com, eToro, and XTB, that have expanded into spot crypto as part of a wider multi-asset strategy.

The Cost of Entry

This high attrition rate was not entirely unexpected. Przemysław Kral, the CEO of zondacrypto, had previously offered a blunt assessment of the situation: “Smaller crypto businesses, particularly those with limited resources, might be forced to quit the EU market as a result of high costs of compliance.”

Kral’s observation highlights a fundamental tension within MiCA. By setting a high bar for entry, Brussels has successfully legitimised the sector, but it has done so by creating a cost curve that acts as a vertical wall for smaller firms.

The garage startup era of European crypto is being replaced by a corporate landscape dominated by well-capitalised incumbents.

The current consultation will likely reveal whether this consolidation has improved market safety or simply stifled innovation by pricing out the next generation of fintech entrepreneurs.

The Stablecoin Friction

While the CASP count is a point of concern, the stablecoin regime remains the most charged aspect of the framework.

Indeed, MiCA has provided much-needed legal clarity, but criticism has been directed at the capital buffers and caps imposed on issuers.

These measures appear to be tightly calibrated to meet EU policy goals, specifically the preservation of monetary sovereignty, rather than pure market neutrality.

The licensing regime is also notably cumbersome. To issue a compliant stablecoin under MiCA, an entity must also acquire an Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license. Again, this dual-layered requirement is a bottleneck that disfavours small players.

The most visible tension involves Tether (USDT), the world’s largest stablecoin with a market capitalisation of between US$185 and 190 billion dollars. USDT currently lacks MiCA authorisation, leading regulated exchanges such as Kraken, Coinbase and Crypto.com to delist it for EU users.

This has created an opening for MiCA-compliant alternatives like Circle’s USDC and its euro-denominated counterparts.

Indeed, Circle’s euro-stablecoin has grown sixfold between January 2025 and March 2026.

A Danger for a Two-Tier System?

However, the EU’s attempt to squeeze non-compliant stablecoins out of the market carries a familiar risk. There is a clear precedent for this: the product intervention measures introduced by ESMA in 2018.

Those restrictions did not abate retail demand for CFDs; they pushed it toward offshore jurisdictions where European regulators have no oversight.

A similar migration may occur in crypto. The danger exists that clients will migrate to offshore-facing platforms that do not impose such restrictions.

By attempting to protect the local market, the EU may inadvertently be making its investors less safe by forcing them into unregulated spaces.

As the Commission begins its review, the central question is whether MiCA will serve as a growth driver for a mature market or whether it will create a two-tier system.

For the 80% of firms that have already vanished, the answer will arrive too late.

The European Commission has a long-standing habit of checking its own homework and MiCA is next up on the docket. On Tuesday, Brussels launched a formal consultation to gather feedback on the functioning of the Regulation.

For the stakeholders involved, the exchanges, the issuers, and the industry associations, this is an invitation to revisit the battlefield.

As the grandfathering period for MiCA approaches its end on July 1, the preliminary results suggest that the compliance cull has been deep.

In the years preceding MiCA’s implementation, the European crypto sector was a fragmented but vast ecosystem. Industry estimates suggest that between 1,100 and 1,300 cryptoasset service providers (CASPs) were active across the union, operating under a patchwork of national regimes.

Today, that number has effectively collapsed. As of May, only 200 CASPs have been authorised under the new harmonised rules.

In Cyprus, only 12 entities have secured authorisation. Tellingly, seven of these are not crypto-native companies but established retail brokers, such as Capital.com, eToro, and XTB, that have expanded into spot crypto as part of a wider multi-asset strategy.

The Cost of Entry

This high attrition rate was not entirely unexpected. Przemysław Kral, the CEO of zondacrypto, had previously offered a blunt assessment of the situation: “Smaller crypto businesses, particularly those with limited resources, might be forced to quit the EU market as a result of high costs of compliance.”

Kral’s observation highlights a fundamental tension within MiCA. By setting a high bar for entry, Brussels has successfully legitimised the sector, but it has done so by creating a cost curve that acts as a vertical wall for smaller firms.

The garage startup era of European crypto is being replaced by a corporate landscape dominated by well-capitalised incumbents.

The current consultation will likely reveal whether this consolidation has improved market safety or simply stifled innovation by pricing out the next generation of fintech entrepreneurs.

The Stablecoin Friction

While the CASP count is a point of concern, the stablecoin regime remains the most charged aspect of the framework.

Indeed, MiCA has provided much-needed legal clarity, but criticism has been directed at the capital buffers and caps imposed on issuers.

These measures appear to be tightly calibrated to meet EU policy goals, specifically the preservation of monetary sovereignty, rather than pure market neutrality.

The licensing regime is also notably cumbersome. To issue a compliant stablecoin under MiCA, an entity must also acquire an Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license. Again, this dual-layered requirement is a bottleneck that disfavours small players.

The most visible tension involves Tether (USDT), the world’s largest stablecoin with a market capitalisation of between US$185 and 190 billion dollars. USDT currently lacks MiCA authorisation, leading regulated exchanges such as Kraken, Coinbase and Crypto.com to delist it for EU users.

This has created an opening for MiCA-compliant alternatives like Circle’s USDC and its euro-denominated counterparts.

Indeed, Circle’s euro-stablecoin has grown sixfold between January 2025 and March 2026.

A Danger for a Two-Tier System?

However, the EU’s attempt to squeeze non-compliant stablecoins out of the market carries a familiar risk. There is a clear precedent for this: the product intervention measures introduced by ESMA in 2018.

Those restrictions did not abate retail demand for CFDs; they pushed it toward offshore jurisdictions where European regulators have no oversight.

A similar migration may occur in crypto. The danger exists that clients will migrate to offshore-facing platforms that do not impose such restrictions.

By attempting to protect the local market, the EU may inadvertently be making its investors less safe by forcing them into unregulated spaces.

As the Commission begins its review, the central question is whether MiCA will serve as a growth driver for a mature market or whether it will create a two-tier system.

For the 80% of firms that have already vanished, the answer will arrive too late.

About the Author: Adonis Adoni
Adonis Adoni
  • 35 Articles
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About the Author: Adonis Adoni
Adonis Adoni is a News Editor at Finance Magnates, with more than six years of experience covering the financial services industry, technology, and their intersection. His work includes C-suite interviews with leading technology and fintech companies across Europe, the US and Asia, exclusive coverage of M&A activity and capital raising, and data-driven industry reporting, with a strong emphasis on engagement and clear storytelling. Areas of Coverage: Online trading industry news Fintech companies Digital assets and crypto markets Regulatory and compliance developments Executive interviews Education: BA in Law – Nottingham Trent University LLM in Health Law – Nottingham Trent University
  • 35 Articles
  • 1 Follower

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