Currencies June 16, 2026 09:35 AM

Binance Poised to Have EU Permission Denied as MiCA Deadline Nears, Sources Say

Greece-based application expected to be turned down, potentially ending Binance's ability to serve EU clients from July

By Marcus Reed
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Two people familiar with the matter told Reuters that Binance's application for a licence under the EU's new MiCA rules, filed with Greece's Hellenic Capital Market Commission (HCMC), is expected to be rejected. The decision would mean Binance could lose the right to offer services to clients across the European Union once the June deadline passes and July begins. Binance says it has cooperated with regulators for 18 months and believes its application complies with MiCA, while HCMC declined to comment citing confidentiality.

Binance Poised to Have EU Permission Denied as MiCA Deadline Nears, Sources Say
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Key Points

  • Binance's MiCA licence application filed with Greece's Hellenic Capital Market Commission is reported by two people familiar with the matter to be set for rejection.
  • MiCA rules require crypto firms to obtain authorisation by the end of June to continue operating across the EU; without a licence Binance would not qualify to operate from the start of July.
  • Binance says it has engaged with regulators for 18 months, regards its application as compliant, and notes HCMC has given no formal indication of the contrary; HCMC declined to comment citing confidentiality.

Two sources with direct knowledge of the situation told Reuters that Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, faces the likely rejection of its application to obtain an EU licence under the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework.

Under MiCA, crypto firms were given a firm cutoff at the end of June to secure authorisation enabling them to continue offering services across the European Union. According to the sources, Binance submitted its licence application to Greece’s market regulator, the Hellenic Capital Market Commission (HCMC), but that application is expected to be turned down.

The HCMC declined to comment on the specifics of Binance’s application, citing confidentiality rules. The sources said that if the licence is indeed refused, Binance would not meet the requirements to operate in the EU from the start of July.

A spokesperson for Binance said the company has been seeking MiCA authorisation and has engaged constructively with regulators over the past 18 months. The spokesperson described the process with HCMC as comprehensive and said Binance believes it met the relevant MiCA requirements. They added that Binance understood HCMC had completed its review and that the application was considered compliant with MiCA standards. "HCMC has given no formal indication of the contrary," the spokesperson told Reuters.

In February, Binance co-CEO Richard Teng cited Greece’s labour force and security profile as advantages for choosing the country as its regulatory hub in Europe. Teng, who previously worked as a regulator in Singapore and Abu Dhabi, said he would leave the determination of Binance’s licence status to EU authorities and whether it would be granted by the July deadline.

The account from the two sources, together with statements from Binance and HCMC’s refusal to comment, frames the immediate regulatory picture as uncertain. The approaching end-of-June MiCA cutoff remains the pivotal date in the timeline, and the expected outcome reported by the sources would constrict Binance’s authorised ability to offer services to EU clients after June ends.

This reporting relies on the information provided by the sources, the comments from Binance, Teng’s earlier remarks about Greece’s suitability, and HCMC’s decision to decline comment due to confidentiality. Where details are limited by those sources or by confidentiality, this article reflects that limitation rather than introducing additional facts or speculation.

Risks

  • Potential loss of legal permission for Binance to provide services to EU clients from July - impacts cryptocurrency exchanges and EU-based digital asset services.
  • Regulatory uncertainty due to HCMC's confidentiality and the lack of a formal public indication - affects market participants and institutional counterparties relying on clear regulatory outcomes.
  • If the application is rejected, service access disruption for EU customers and related market participants could follow - impacts retail and institutional crypto users, payment routing, and trading venues.

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