Binance (BNB) to Halt EU Services July 1 After MiCA License Lapse

BNB

BNB/USDT

$565.11
+1.64%
24h Volume

$526,170,614.41

24h H/L

$570.34 / $550.37

Change: $19.97 (3.63%)

Long/Short
75.6%
Long: 75.6%Short: 24.3%
Funding Rate

+0.0040%

Longs pay

Data provided by COINOTAG DATALive data
BNB
BNB
Daily

$565.26

0.83%

Volume (24h): -

Resistance Levels
Resistance 3$603.04
Resistance 2$588.6185
Resistance 1$572.7513
Price$565.26
Support 1$561.305
Support 2$540.60
Support 3$484.8019
Pivot (PP):$561.99
Trend:Downtrend
RSI (14):36.9
(05:32 PM UTC)
4 min read
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Crypto News

Binance, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume, will stop offering services across the European Union from July 1 after failing to secure a license under the bloc's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework. The exchange has begun emailing affected customers in France, Poland, Italy, and Spain, instructing them on how to withdraw assets before the cutoff. Operating without authorization once the transition window closes would breach EU law. Binance stressed that user funds remain safely held and accessible at any time, yet a broad swath of its European user base now faces the prospect of moving balances or migrating to a compliant venue ahead of the deadline.

MiCA, the EU's unified rulebook for crypto-asset service providers that took effect in 2024, sets a hard deadline of June 30 for firms to obtain authorization from a national regulator. The regime runs on a passport system: a single license granted by any one of the 27 member states confers the right to operate across the entire bloc. The framework covers investor protection, transparency, licensing, operational supervision, and anti-money-laundering obligations. Numerous crypto companies failed to complete the licensing process within the window, and Binance was among the platforms still without the required approval as the grace period neared its end on June 30.

Binance confirmed on June 24 that it had withdrawn its MiCA license application in Greece, a setback that left the exchange without a clear path to authorization before the deadline. The company had been in talks with regulators in Ireland, Latvia, and Greece, but all three reportedly balked at granting approval. The collapse of the Greek bid effectively forced the suspension, as no alternative member-state license was ready in time. The reversal was notable for a firm that has spent years trying to formalize its standing across European jurisdictions amid steadily tightening oversight of the sector.

Regulators flagged three core concerns, according to people familiar with the discussions: Binance's prior money-laundering penalties, the complexity of its global corporate structure, and a corporate culture viewed as overly tolerant of risk. In 2023, Binance admitted to violating U.S. anti-money-laundering laws and agreed to pay more than $4.3 billion in penalties. Co-founder Changpeng Zhao, known as CZ, stepped down as chief executive and served four months in custody before later receiving a pardon from President Trump. Greek authorities reportedly concluded that CZ also failed the regulator's fit-and-proper assessment, the standard test of an applicant's integrity and competence.

Binance signaled it will pursue a license through another EU member state and publish its chosen jurisdiction once preparations are complete. France is viewed as the frontrunner: the exchange is already registered with the country's financial markets authority (AMF) as a digital-asset service provider, giving it a lower hurdle than rival jurisdictions. Jillian Lynch, Binance's European head, said the firm is not leaving the EU and expects to obtain a MiCA license within months. The company framed the suspension as a temporary, compliance-driven pause rather than a strategic retreat from one of its most important regional markets.

Across its customer notifications, Binance emphasized that the suspension does not place client holdings at risk, reiterating that assets remain protected and withdrawable. Accounts will continue to provide access even after new-customer onboarding and service provision cease on July 1. The exchange described Europe as a key market and reaffirmed its intent to operate under what it called a clear, fair, and harmonized regime. For now, EU residents holding altcoins such as Aave (AAVE) and Algorand (ALGO), stablecoins, or other balances on the platform must decide whether to withdraw to self-custody, move to a licensed competitor, or wait for the firm's anticipated re-entry.

Read together, these threads underscore how MiCA is reshaping market access for global exchanges, with compliance — not price — now the decisive variable for European users, and Binance's native BNB token sitting at the center of the affected ecosystem. Our reading of COINOTAG's aggregate market data frames the timing: the Fear & Greed Index sits at 13 out of 100, deep in Extreme Fear, while Bitcoin dominance holds near 70% and total crypto market capitalization stands around $1.72 trillion. Bitcoin trades close to the $60,000 level, far below its all-time high. A forced exchange exit from a major bloc, landing in an already risk-averse tape, is the kind of structural friction that can thin liquidity precisely when sentiment is fragile.

COINOTAG does not provide financial advisory services. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments involve high risk.

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James Mitchell

James Mitchell

COINOTAG author

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AI-AssistedSenior Technical Analyst·James Mitchell is a senior technical analyst with over six years of dedicated cryptocurrency market analysis experience.

AI-generated, AI-reviewed, under COINOTAG editorial oversight.

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