Crypto Regulation

Tether Faces July 1 MiCA Deadline as European Service Restrictions Loom

The transition period for the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation is set to conclude on July 1, 2026, marking a significant shift for stablecoin issuers and service providers operating within the European Economic Area (EEA).

Tether, the issuer of USDT, remains without an EEA license, raising concerns regarding the continued availability and liquidity of the world’s largest stablecoin for European users.

A primary hurdle in Tether’s path to MiCA compliance is the regulation’s strict requirement for e-money token (EMT) issuers. Under the new framework, issuers must hold at least 60% of their stablecoin reserves in European bank deposits.

Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino has previously indicated that this specific mandate is incompatible with the company’s current reserve model, and the firm has not applied for EMT authorization under the MiCA regime.

This lack of authorization contrasts with other major stablecoin issuers. For example, Circle’s USDC and EURC have achieved authorized status, positioning them as compliant alternatives within the regulated European market.

Impact on Exchange Listings and Liquidity

The July 1 deadline has already prompted preemptive measures from several major cryptocurrency exchanges. To ensure they remain compliant with MiCA, platforms have begun restricting access to non-compliant stablecoins for users located in the EEA:

  • Binance: Delisted USDT and several other non-compliant stablecoins from its EEA spot markets in early 2025.
  • Kraken: Halted spot trading for USDT within the EEA during a similar timeframe.
  • Crypto.com: Suspended services for USDT for European users in January 2025.

Entities offering crypto-asset services to EU clients without the necessary licenses after the deadline are considered in breach of the law. Regulators have signaled that no further grace periods or extensions will be granted, forcing platforms to either obtain a Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP) license, cease operations in the region, or migrate client accounts to licensed institutions.

What Remains Uncertain

While the regulatory deadline is set, several operational details remain unclear. Tether has not provided an exact timeline for potential future compliance efforts or a specific roadmap for how it intends to adjust its service model for European participants.

Furthermore, while exchange delistings have already impacted liquidity, the full scale of the reduction in USDT accessibility across the fragmented European landscape is yet to be fully quantified.

EU-based users holding USDT on licensed platforms are increasingly being notified to transition their holdings to compliant assets or move them to self-hosted wallets to avoid potential disruptions. As of the current deadline, any platform operating without a license faces enforcement actions, including potential website blocks and regulatory fines.