Revolut Delists USDT in EU as Tether Refuses MiCA Compliance

What You Need to Know
- Revolut will delist USDT for European customers on August 31, 2026, converting balances to local currency.
- Tether refused to comply with EU’s MiCA framework requiring 60% reserve deposits in EU banks.
- Revolut’s CySEC license subjects it to MiCA stablecoin rules, eliminating legal room to keep USDT listed.
- Coinbase, Kraken, Crypto.com, OKX, and Binance already delisted USDT in Europe by Q1 2025.
Revolut will stop offering USDT to European customers on August 31, 2026, converting any remaining balances to local currency at market rate, because Tether declined to seek authorization under the EU’s MiCA framework, and Revolut’s own MiCA license leaves it no legal room to keep the token listed.
The mechanics here matter. When Revolut received its crypto-asset service provider license from CySEC in November 2025, it became subject to MiCA’s stablecoin rules, which treat fiat-backed tokens as e-money tokens and require issuers to hold at least 60% of reserves as deposits in EU banks. Tether’s CEO Paolo Ardoino has argued that structure introduces liquidity risk rather than reducing it, particularly if large numbers of users redeemed simultaneously at smaller European institutions. Rather than restructure, Tether retired its euro-denominated stablecoin EURT in November 2024 and effectively ceded the regulated EU market. MiCA’s transition period, which had allowed legacy-authorized firms to keep operating, ended on July 1, 2026, and Revolut’s wind-down timeline tracks almost exactly to that cutoff.
Revolut is not early to this. It is simply the last major retail platform to arrive at a conclusion Coinbase reached in December 2024 and Kraken, Crypto.com, OKX, and Binance all reached by Q1 2025.
The reversal is sharper because of what Revolut was doing just months ago. In late 2025, the company introduced zero-fee stablecoin swaps and 1:1 USDT/USDC conversions, a product push that now looks like a brief window between regulatory ambiguity and enforcement. Once the CySEC license cleared, that ambiguity closed. The delisting does not freeze user funds; according to The Crypto Times, ESMA has confirmed users retain the right to hold, transfer, or self-convert their USDT off-platform. What it does close is the on-ramp, which is where market share actually shifts.
The regulated lane now belongs to Circle
The structural beneficiary is USDC. Circle’s USDC and EURC are both MiCA-compliant and remain available on licensed platforms across roughly 30 European nations. Per CoinGecko, USDT still dominates globally with around $184 billion in market cap against USDC’s roughly $73 billion, but that global figure increasingly obscures a regional split where USDC holds the only legal position on compliant venues. BNY Mellon’s institutional mint-and-burn infrastructure for USDC reinforces exactly this trajectory, giving Circle a settlement-grade on-ramp that Tether, having opted out of EU authorization, cannot match inside the bloc.
The buy button on Revolut stops working July 6. New deposits halt July 30. After August 31, the question is not whether European retail exposure to USDT shrinks, but how quickly that demand finds its way to compliant alternatives or exits the regulated perimeter entirely.
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