Spain’s markets regulator has drawn a hard line on the timing of the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) licensing requirements, signaling that crypto firms which have not secured authorization by the deadline will not receive extensions.
According to a Friday Reuters report, the chair of Spain’s National Securities Market Commission (CNMV), Carlos San Basilio, said there will be “no exceptions or extensions” to the July 1 MiCA deadline for companies that have not received approval to operate in European Union member states. The warning is aimed at major exchanges including Binance.
Key takeaways
- Spain’s CNMV chair says MiCA’s July 1 deadline will not be extended for unlicensed crypto firms.
- Reuters reports that Binance had not received EU regulator approval as of Friday, after its Greece license application was withdrawn.
- If approval is not granted soon, Binance may need to stop onboarding new EU users and restrict services for EU accounts from July 1.
- Other exchanges have reportedly secured last-minute MiCA authorizations, potentially reducing but not eliminating market disruption.
MiCA deadline without waivers
MiCA’s phased implementation has been a central question for Europe’s crypto industry: whether firms would be given additional time to meet licensing conditions if regulators required extra steps or review. Reuters’ report indicates Spain’s position is unequivocal.
San Basilio said the key concern is how the end of the transitional period will unfold and how regulated firms and regulators will manage the “adaptation to the new environment.” Reuters adds that the CNMV chair stated the agency is in contact with organizations that have not been granted a licence.
What happens if Binance isn’t licensed
Binance’s EU status has been under scrutiny as MiCA approaches its effective dates. Reuters reported that Binance’s operations in the EU are expected to be scaled back after the exchange withdrew its application with Greece’s Hellenic Capital Market Commission and had not received approval from any other authority as of Friday.
Under MiCA-related service rules described in earlier coverage, failure to secure authorization could force changes starting July 1, including halting the onboarding of new EU-based users and limiting certain services for EU-based accounts. The scale of the potential impact is amplified by Binance’s large user base in Europe.
Reuters’ framing suggests the immediate issue is operational continuity for customers and liquidity providers, rather than broader regulatory uncertainty alone. Even if existing users retain some access for a limited time, onboarding restrictions and service limitations can still affect trading flows and compliance processes.
Europe’s exchange scramble: approvals for some, uncertainty for others
While the CNMV’s comments emphasize no extensions, Reuters also notes that other crypto exchanges have secured late approvals under MiCA. That contrast matters for investors and traders because it implies the market may not adjust uniformly: some platforms may remain fully operational in compliance with the framework, while others face step-downs.
Earlier Cointelegraph reporting highlighted that Binance’s licensing process has been complicated by application decisions. In particular, the exchange withdrew its Greece application, a move that reduced the likelihood of receiving timely authorization through that channel.
Debate over compliance and market practices
As the deadline nears, public criticism around exchange compliance has intensified. OKX founder and CEO Mingxing Xu responded to comments attributed to former Binance CEO Changpeng “CZ” Zhao about the EU deadline, saying Binance ignores laws and regulations while misleading the public.
In that response, Xu pointed to public reporting and court filings alleging that trading activity described as “best liquidity” included conduct tied to risks involving money laundering, sanctions violations, and market manipulation.
Cointelegraph also reported that it reached out to a Binance spokesperson, who referred to a Wednesday statement from the company.
Users weighing alternatives
Some users appear to be preparing for reduced access by looking at other venues. In community posts cited by Cointelegraph, Reddit users said they were considering Kraken for moving funds. Kraken—operated through Payward—has a Crypto Asset Service Provider licence via the Central Bank of Ireland, according to the publication’s earlier reporting.
For EU customers, the practical takeaway is that exchange choice may become a compliance issue as much as a convenience one. With onboarding restrictions expected to take effect if licenses are not obtained in time, users who wait for official operational guidance could face fewer options.
Over the next days, the key uncertainty is whether Binance will secure the required authorization in time to avoid the July 1 onboarding and service restrictions. Traders and customers should watch for regulator announcements and official updates from exchanges, because the transitional arrangements are ending and compliance-driven access changes could reshape liquidity across Europe quickly.






