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Binance Tells EU Users It Will Wind Down Services as MiCA Deadline Hits

Binance has begun notifying European Union customers it will restrict services after withdrawing its Greek MiCA application, realizing the EU-exit risk that surfaced earlier this month as the bloc's July 1 enforcement deadline nears.
Binance Tells EU Users It Will Wind Down Services as MiCA Deadline Hits

Binance has started telling European Union users it will wind down services in the bloc after failing to secure a license under the Markets in Crypto-Assets framework, the realization of an EU-exit risk that surfaced earlier this month.

The world's largest exchange emailed customers in France, Italy, Poland and Spain that it can no longer accept new registrations and will restrict services, CoinDesk reported Friday, citing a company spokesperson. The notices land days before a June 30 cutoff: under MiCA's transitional schedule, crypto firms must hold a license from at least one EU member state by July 1 to serve residents across the bloc, and unlicensed firms must wind down their EU activities.

The user notices follow Binance's withdrawal of its MiCA application in Greece on Wednesday, after the Hellenic Capital Market Commission left the filing without a formal decision as the transition period closed. Binance said it will instead pursue authorization in another EU member state, which it has not yet named.

Binance framed the wind-down around continuity of access in a blog post to European users.

"Your assets remain safe and secure, and will remain accessible at all times," the exchange wrote, adding that "some users may be impacted depending on their country and account status, and we will communicate directly with affected users on next steps and available options."

The notice directs affected customers to keep watching their email and in-app alerts for account-specific instructions. Binance did not specify in the post which services would be curtailed or on what timeline.

July 1 Wall

ESMA set out what unauthorized providers must do once the transitional period ends. They must immediately stop onboarding new EU clients, halt marketing, and limit services to what customers need to sell, transfer, or close positions. The European Securities and Markets Authority added that national regulators could pursue coordinated enforcement against significant unauthorized cross-border providers after the deadline.

The pressure is not unique to Binance. Roughly 83% of crypto-asset service providers active in the EU have yet to secure MiCA authorization, per ESMA's statement. The framework requires a single national license that then passports across all 27 member states through ESMA oversight.

From Risk to Reality

The exit had been building. The Defiant reported June 16 that Greek regulators appeared set to reject the Greek application, a characterization Binance disputed at the time, saying the HCMC had found its filing compliant. By Wednesday the exchange had withdrawn the application outright and said it was "not leaving Europe." The Friday user notices convert that posture into operational reality for EU customers.

Binance intends to file next in France, where its local unit already holds a Digital Asset Service Provider registration with the markets regulator AMF, the Financial Times reported Friday. Any approval would likely come after July 1, leaving a gap during which Binance cannot serve EU residents. "Our ambitions in Europe remain the same, and we are confident we will secure a MiCA licence in the coming months," the exchange said in its June 24 blog post.

Licensed Rivals Pull Ahead

MiCA's licensing teeth are forcing the largest exchange out of the bloc while compliant rivals consolidate access. Ripple secured a preliminary CASP license from Luxembourg's CSSF last Monday, a step toward full passporting across the 30-country European Economic Area. Kraken, Coinbase and Bitvavo already hold MiCA authorizations, and WhiteBIT cleared an Austrian license this month.

Binance's EU footprint is narrower than its global scale suggests. Euro-denominated pairs account for roughly 1% of its global spot volume, CryptoQuant analyst Maartunn told Cointelegraph this week, limiting the direct revenue hit even as the symbolic weight of the bloc's largest exchange exiting under enforcement lands across the sector.

Binance said it will continue contacting affected users directly with account-specific next steps before the July 1 deadline.

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