2026-06-27, 7:24 PM

European crypto users are being paid to move before MiCA closes the door

The European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) has triggered a fight among licensed crypto exchanges to capture users and deposits from platforms that may no longer be allowed to serve the bloc.

The new regulation, which is set to take full effect on July 1, hardens the line between firms with bloc-wide authorization and those still operating under legacy national regimes.

Exchanges without approval face restrictions on serving customers, forcing users to decide whether to move assets to licensed platforms, withdraw to self-custody, or wait for wind-down instructions.

As a result, several licensed crypto trading platforms are scrambling to turn that uncertainty into growth by offering bonuses, deposit matches, and prize incentives aimed at customers leaving those non-compliant platforms.

MiCA forces a liquidity land grab amongst exchanges

Authorized platforms are leveraging their balance sheets ahead of the transition deadline, deploying targeted promotional capital to absorb accounts displaced by the regulatory shift.

Unlike traditional bull-market acquisition campaigns aimed at new retail entrants, the current incentive structures are explicitly designed to capture established capital fleeing non-compliant venues.

For context, OKX Europe is leading the acquisition push with a deposit bonus offering 8% to European Economic Area residents who migrate their portfolios.

The campaign, which supports on-chain transfers alongside traditional payment rails like SEPA and mobile wallets, runs through July 13. Company executives have explicitly positioned the offer as a landing pad for clients leaving unregulated platforms and firms executing forced market exits.

Coinbase, the largest US-based exchange, is deploying a similar strategy aimed at high-value traders. The firm is offering a 5% transfer bonus for its Coinbase One subscribers across eight major markets, including Germany, France, and the UK.

Meanwhile, Kraken has opted for a sweepstakes model, launching a 1 million-euro ($1.07 million) prize draw for EEA customers who deposit funds before the end of July.

To attract migrating capital, the exchange is actively marketing its comprehensive regulatory stack, highlighting its MiCA authorization from the Central Bank of Ireland, along with existing MiFID and e-money licenses.

Smaller regional operators are also carving out niches in the migration wave, with SwissBorg offering a 3% deposit match strictly targeted at transfers originating from non-MiCA exchanges.

Market observers said these efforts aim to convert immediate regulatory disruption into permanent market share. In a newly consolidated European market, every migrated account represents a durable source of future revenue through trading volume, staking balances, and subscription fees.

MiCA’s regulatory shakeout spotlights Binance

The aggressive marketing campaigns reflect a broader structural reset across the European digital asset market.

MiCA is designed to replace a fragmented patchwork of national registrations with a unified licensing regime.

Under the framework, authorization in a single member state grants a regulatory passport to operate across the entire economic bloc, but firms failing to secure this designation face immediate market exclusion.

The resulting attrition rate is expected to be severe. OKX Europe estimates that upward of 80% of currently active regional exchanges will be forced to shut down after the July 1 deadline. Out of an estimated 1,100 to 1,300 legacy crypto asset service providers, only about 200 currently hold valid MiCA licenses.

This regulatory contraction is now impacting the industry’s largest incumbent. Binance has failed to secure a bloc-wide MiCA license after Greek authorities rejected its application last week.

The setback has disrupted operations across key European markets, prompting the exchange to issue withdrawal and service modification instructions to users in France, Italy, Spain, and Poland.

While Binance noted that some clients may experience service disruptions before July 1, the firm stated that user assets remain fully backed and stopped short of mandating immediate, wholesale withdrawals.

The compliance bottleneck is equally apparent among smaller operators. In Lithuania, more than 240 digital asset businesses shuttered in late 2025 following the expiration of local transition periods.

Despite this situation, regulators within the region have signaled zero tolerance for delays.

This week, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) warned that unauthorized operations post-deadline constitute a breach of EU law and directed non-compliant firms to execute orderly asset transitions to regulated platforms or self-custody wallets.

Compliance becomes the new competitive moat

For the firms that survive Europe’s regulatory reset, compliance is becoming more than legal cover. It is becoming a barrier to entry and a driver of market share.

Once an exchange secures bloc-wide authorization, it can use that status to attract retail deposits, institutional order flow, and business partners that may no longer be available to unapproved rivals. That advantage is becoming more valuable as users weigh whether their current platforms will remain accessible after the deadline.

OKX Chief Executive Star Xu described the transition as a necessary step in the industry’s maturation, saying clear rules, investor protections, and consistent supervision are needed to support sustainable growth.

He wrote on X:

“A harmonized approach will help ensure that innovation, competition, and growth are driven by product excellence and customer value—not by differences in regulatory oversight.”

The regulatory bottleneck is also creating opportunities for infrastructure providers. BitGo launched a MiCA-compliant Crypto-as-a-Service platform on June 17, giving companies a way to continue serving customers through regulated custody and execution infrastructure while they pursue their own licenses.

That model could become more common as smaller firms confront the cost and complexity of independent authorization.

Operators without the balance sheet or compliance teams needed to complete the process may seek partnerships, merge with larger rivals, or narrow their services to avoid activities that require approval.

For customers, the trade-off is becoming clearer. Stronger oversight may bring better protections and more consistent rules across Europe. It may also reduce choice as the market consolidates around larger exchanges with the capital, licensing, and compliance infrastructure needed to operate under MiCA.

Ultimately, the success of the transition will depend on whether European authorities can enforce the unified rulebook without triggering disorderly exits or leaving users uncertain about access to their assets.

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