MiCA (the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation) is reshaping crypto markets across the European Economic Area (EEA). It’s also created confusion, especially after some exchanges restricted certain stablecoins for EU users. Bitcoin and Ethereum are largely outside MiCA’s “issuer” regime, while USDC and USDT are stablecoins (e-money tokens) that can be subject to MiCA requirements depending on how they are issued and distributed in the EU.

Understanding MiCA and crypto-asset classifications
MiCA is the EU’s first horizontal rulebook for crypto-assets that are not already covered by existing EU financial-services laws (for example, traditional securities regulation). It creates definitions, sets conduct and disclosure expectations, and introduces authorisation and operational rules for crypto-asset service providers (CASPs) operating in the EEA.
Overview of MiCA’s timeline (what applies when)
MiCA entered into force in 2023. In practice, it has been rolling out in stages:
- Stablecoin rules (for ARTs and EMTs) have applied since mid-2024.
- CASP rules (licensing/operational requirements for exchanges, brokers, custodians, etc.) have applied since late 2024, with national transition (“grandfathering”) periods in many Member States running into 2025–2026 depending on local implementation.
As of 2026-02-08, many EU platforms are still finalising MiCA authorisations and product line-ups while regulators and ESMA/EBA guidance continues to clarify expectations.
Key definitions: crypto-assets, stablecoins, and utility tokens
MiCA groups crypto-assets into categories with different obligations:
- Crypto-assets (general): a digital representation of value or rights transferable and storable electronically using distributed ledger or similar technology.
- Asset-Referenced Tokens (ARTs): aim to stabilise value by referencing multiple assets (e.g., a basket of currencies/commodities).
- E-Money Tokens (EMTs): aim to stabilise value by referencing one official currency (e.g., USD). USDC and USDT are typically treated as EMT-type stablecoins because they target a 1:1 peg to the US dollar.
- Utility tokens: intended to provide digital access to a good or service on a platform.
MiCA does not replace other EU regimes. If a token qualifies as a financial instrument under MiFID II (often discussed as “security tokens”), it falls under existing securities rules instead of MiCA.
What MiCA regulates (and what it doesn’t)
MiCA focuses heavily on:
- Issuers (especially stablecoin issuers) and their disclosures, governance, and reserve/risk management.
- CASPs and how they custody assets, list tokens, manage conflicts, and protect clients.
- Market integrity rules such as market abuse provisions for crypto markets.
MiCA is less direct when there is no identifiable issuer to regulate (a key point for Bitcoin and, in practice, often for Ethereum).
Why Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDC & USDT are (mostly) exempt from core MiCA issuer rules
When people say “BTC/ETH/USDC/USDT are exempt,” they usually mean one of two things:
- BTC and ETH: there is generally no issuer that can be made responsible for a whitepaper, capital, or reserve obligations under MiCA’s issuance framework.
- USDC and USDT: they are stablecoins and therefore within MiCA’s stablecoin perimeter, but the practical impact in the EU depends on whether the token is offered to the public in the EU and whether an appropriately authorised EU issuer structure is in place.
Criteria behind “exemptions” in practice
MiCA’s strictest issuance obligations attach to an identifiable issuer or offeror targeting the EU market. Where there is no central issuer (typical for fully decentralised networks), MiCA cannot apply issuer-style obligations in the same way.
Separately, even when a token itself isn’t “banned,” EU-based CASPs may restrict certain assets to meet MiCA operational, consumer protection, and stablecoin distribution requirements.
Treatment of Bitcoin and Ethereum under MiCA
Bitcoin is widely viewed as the clearest example of a decentralised crypto-asset with no issuer. MiCA therefore does not impose stablecoin-style reserve rules or issuer authorisation on Bitcoin.
Ethereum is also generally treated as a decentralised crypto-asset rather than an issued stablecoin or a centrally issued token. In practice, MiCA’s issuer obligations typically do not attach to ETH in the way they would to a token issued by a company conducting a public offer.
Important EU nuance: even if BTC/ETH are not regulated via an “issuer” regime, the platforms that provide services around them (custody, exchange, brokerage, execution) are regulated as CASPs under MiCA and must meet EU standards (governance, safeguarding, disclosures, complaints handling, and more).
Stablecoins (USDC, USDT) and MiCA’s regulatory boundary
MiCA treats stablecoins—especially EMTs—more strictly because of potential impacts on payments and financial stability. Requirements can include:
- Authorisation and EU establishment for the issuer (for EMTs, typically via an e-money institution or credit institution framework aligned with MiCA’s EMT chapter).
- Reserve management, redemption rights, governance, and transparency expectations.
- Ongoing supervision, with additional scrutiny for “significant” stablecoins (based on scale and usage indicators).
USDC: Circle has pursued an EU compliance path by setting up regulated operations in the EU (commonly reported via France) and aligning reserve and disclosure practices with EU expectations. That has generally supported broader EU availability where platforms are comfortable with the compliance posture.
USDT: Tether has historically faced more questions in the EU market about MiCA-aligned issuer status and disclosures. As a result, some EEA-facing platforms have chosen to limit or discontinue certain USDT services (for example, restricting availability for new trades or limiting specific pairs), even if users may still see USDT in limited contexts depending on the platform’s approach and local supervisory expectations.
What this means for EU markets, users, and crypto businesses
For EU residents, the practical outcome is often:
- BTC and ETH remain widely listed, because there is no stablecoin issuance compliance question and demand/liquidity remain high.
- Stablecoin access can vary by exchange, because exchanges must manage MiCA-related distribution and risk controls, and may prefer EU-aligned alternatives.
- More standardisation over time, as CASPs complete MiCA licensing and harmonise their EU product offerings across Member States.
| Crypto asset | How MiCA mainly applies | Typical EU availability (platform-dependent) | Primary compliance pressure point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin (BTC) | CASP rules (services), not issuer rules | Wide | Exchange/custody compliance by CASPs |
| Ethereum (ETH) | CASP rules (services), not issuer rules |
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