Binance will suspend cryptocurrency services for customers across much of the European Union beginning July 1 after failing to obtain authorization under the bloc’s new Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulatory framework, marking one of the biggest setbacks yet for the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange.
The company withdrew its application for a MiCA licence in Greece after regulators indicated that approval was unlikely before the June 30 deadline. Without authorization from an EU member state, Binance is no longer permitted to offer regulated crypto services throughout the bloc once MiCA becomes fully effective, according to reporting by the Financial Times.
Europe’s Largest Crypto Regulatory Overhaul
The decision comes as the European Union completes implementation of MiCA, the world’s first comprehensive regulatory framework for digital assets. The rules establish a single licensing regime across the EU’s 27 member states, replacing fragmented national regulations with unified standards covering exchanges, stablecoins, custody services and consumer protection.
Industry estimates indicate that more than 1,200 crypto firms previously operating under national registrations have been affected by the new regime, while fewer than one in five had secured MiCA authorization before the deadline, according to an analysis published by Euronews.
Customers Retain Access to Assets
Binance said customers’ digital assets remain secure and accessible, although onboarding of new users has already been suspended and several trading and investment services will be restricted from July 1 until regulatory approval is obtained. Existing users will retain access to withdrawals and asset custody during the transition, according to company notices summarized by CoinDesk.
Strategic Challenge for the World’s Largest Exchange
The regulatory setback highlights Binance’s continuing effort to rebuild its global compliance credentials following years of heightened regulatory scrutiny. Although the exchange still accounts for roughly 39% of global centralized cryptocurrency trading volume, losing access to one of the world’s largest regulated crypto markets represents a significant strategic challenge. Binance has stated that it intends to pursue MiCA authorization through France, but regulatory approval is unlikely before the July implementation deadline, according to market analysis by BeInCrypto.
The post Binance to halt EU crypto services after missing MiCA licence deadline appeared first on Crypto Reporter.


