Binance Loses France as MiCA Deadline Exposes Preparation Gap

What You Need to Know
- Binance suspended trading in France after failing to obtain a MiCA license from French regulators.
- Fewer than 244 of roughly 3,000 crypto firms secured MiCA licenses across the EU bloc.
- Coinbase and OKX launched targeted campaigns to attract displaced French users before the July 1 deadline.
- Investors withdrew over $1.6 billion from Binance in one month amid regulatory uncertainty.
Binance has suspended all trading services in France after failing to obtain a MiCA license from the Autorité des Marchés Financiers, leaving roughly 2 million French users able only to withdraw their funds. The exchange was also denied a license in Greece in the days prior, and has similarly halted operations in Poland, Italy, and Spain.
The pattern here is less about France specifically and more about what MiCA is doing to market structure across the EU. Fewer than 244 of roughly 3,000 crypto firms have secured MiCA licenses in the bloc, which means Binance is far from alone in its exposure, but its scale makes the fallout more visible. Coinbase and OKX moved quickly, launching targeted campaigns across France, Germany, Italy, and several other European markets to absorb displaced users before the July 1 deadline. That kind of coordinated competitive response is only possible when a regulatory cutoff is known in advance, and both firms had clearly prepared. The contrast with Binance’s situation is sharp: Binance applied for its French license only weeks before the deadline, a timeline that left little room for regulatory back-and-forth. Meanwhile, payments infrastructure firm Bridge secured both a MiCA CASP authorization and an Electronic Money Institution license, illustrating that the licensing process is navigable for firms that treat it as a strategic priority rather than a compliance checkbox.
Over the past month, investors pulled more than $1.6 billion from Binance, including a single week of $1.23 billion in withdrawals that drove Ethereum outflows to a three-year high of 166,000 transactions.
That number sits alongside $114 billion in assets still on the platform, which limits how alarming the outflows look in isolation, but the directional signal matters. Binance’s missed EU deadline arrives while the exchange is simultaneously under scrutiny from U.S. Justice and Treasury officials over alleged Iranian sanctions evasion, a Wall Street Journal report the company has contested and taken legal action against. The 2023 guilty plea to U.S. sanctions and anti-money-laundering violations, the $4.3 billion fine, and founder Changpeng Zhao’s four-month prison sentence already established a compliance narrative that European regulators are unlikely to ignore when evaluating license applications. Regulatory risk and user trust are not separate problems for Binance right now.
Binance has stated it remains committed to Europe and expects to announce a MiCA-compliant jurisdiction in the coming months. Whether that timeline holds depends on which member state it targets and how much of the French and broader European user base Coinbase and OKX manage to lock in before then.
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