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The transition period for Europe's Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation, or MiCA, officially ends on July 1, 2026. This date signifies the transition from preparation to direct regulatory enforcement for crypto-asset service providers operating within the EU.
Up until now, many businesses considered compliance to be a documentation process. In July, that will be totally different. Similar to the requirements already in place in traditional finance, MiCA now requires cryptocurrency companies to demonstrate that they offer best execution for customer trades.
Vague internal policies and generalizations about the quality of execution will no longer be accepted by regulators. Businesses will require concrete proof that each trade was executed under the best possible market conditions at that precise moment.
The complexity stems from the actual workings of cryptocurrency markets. In contrast to conventional stock exchanges, cryptocurrency trading is dispersed across over 100 venues that are open 24/7. No central pricing source or unified tape exists. The same asset may trade simultaneously at various prices on several exchanges. Because firms are limited to using compliant venues, MiCA further restricts the available liquidity pool.
This leads to a significant infrastructure issue. Businesses now require systems that can record market data at the tick level, reconstruct execution conditions years later, and explain to regulators why a trade occurred on one venue rather than another. The regulations stipulate that this data must be available for a minimum of five years.
Why should regular users care?
The market is changing in multiple ways for regular cryptocurrency users.
- There will most likely be more uniformity and transparency in European trading. Stronger reporting procedures and more transparent execution quality are required of exchanges and brokers.
Certain platforms might completely vanish from the European market. Due to their inability to pay for compliance infrastructure, smaller exchanges may be forced to close or bar EU clients. In the short term, that could result in fewer trading venues being available.
- There will be more stringent onboarding and monitoring procedures. As businesses strive to remain compliant, identity verification, transaction monitoring, and reporting requirements are anticipated to grow. The overall experience for cryptocurrency holders is becoming more similar to that of traditional financial markets.
Although trading may become safer and more transparent, it may also become more regulated, slower to innovate, and more reliant on sizable compliant platforms that have the means to satisfy MiCA's requirements.



Dan Burgin
U.Today Editorial Team