The time has come
We’ve already touched on MiCA, and honestly, this is not one of those topics you “cover once and move on.” MiCA is the EU’s regulatory framework for crypto assets. In plain terms, it moves the market from “it works somehow” to “it works the way a regulator expects.” It defines who can legally provide crypto services in the EU, how responsibility is allocated, how the business must be structured, and why a bank should trust you based on substance, not slogans.
❗️And it’s not just about the big exchanges. If you’re building a crypto product, fintech infrastructure, a wallet, custody, exchange, payments, or any model that touches EU clients or plans to scale into the EU, MiCA applies to you in practice, even before you feel it on paper. The key shift is that the market is no longer judged by good storytelling. It’s judged by architecture: where your licensing sits, where decision-making actually happens, how your flows look through a compliance lens, and whether a bank can understand your model in one coherent picture.
📛What happens if you do nothing. You may not see an explosion on day one, and that’s exactly the trap. First, opening and maintaining banking and payment rails becomes harder. Then questions start appearing, from partners, from providers, from compliance teams. Then you realise that entering the EU market now costs more than a marketing budget. It costs time, documents, and structural decisions you can’t assemble in a week. And in the end, you’ll likely be catching up to those who started early, but in a tighter environment, with less flexibility and fewer options.
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