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MiCA Day One: We Tested How Europe's Unlicensed Exchanges Treat New Users

By Funded4Trading — July 1, 2026  ·  5 views
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Europe's MiCA transition period ended on July 1, cutting off unlicensed crypto exchanges from serving new EU clients.

Finance Magnates tested what users with an EU IP address encounter when attempting to register on five platforms that remain without a CASP licence, and compared those sign-up experiences with each exchange's public messaging.

Binance: Restrictions Announced, Sign-Up Remains Accessible

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Binance withdrew its MiCA licence application in Greece on June 24 and said it would stop onboarding new EU users and opening new positions from July 1. Existing users will retain withdrawal access.

CEO Richard Teng reiterated this on X, saying user assets remain safe and secure and that affected users would keep access to previously communicated options.

Loading Binance's site from an EU IP triggers a popup titled "European Regulatory Information", but the sign-up process itself is not immediately blocked. Instead, users are directed to contact customer support.

Whether registration ultimately succeeds beyond that point was not tested.

Binance co-founder Changpeng Zhao offered his own account of the licence withdrawal, saying regulators had previously considered the application "fully compliant" and describing competition among EU jurisdictions to host Binance's licence. Those claims could not be independently verified.

MEXC: Reassurance, No Visible Change During Sign-Up

MEXC's only public comment on MiCA came from its support account in response to a user's question on X on June 23, stating that EU users could continue using the platform normally and that any future changes would be announced in advance. It was not a formal company statement.

The initial registration experience reflected that message. Finance Magnates encountered no visible restrictions during sign-up, and MEXC's published list of restricted jurisdictions, last updated in May 2026, does not include EU member states.

MEXC's leadership had signalled EU compliance was a priority before the deadline. In April, newly appointed CEO Vugar Usi, formerly COO of Bitget, described MiCA authorisation as "a top strategic priority."

As of July 1, however, no public update on the licence application had been published beyond the support account's reply.

Bitget: Licence Pending, Registration Adds Friction

Bitget CEO Gracy Chen has said the exchange applied for a MiCA licence in Austria and is awaiting a decision. The company has also said it will not provide services in the EEA without authorisation.

During Finance Magnates' test, registering from a German IP triggered a "Restricted IP" popup specifically naming Germany. Users could proceed only after ticking a self-declaration confirming they were not German residents. Whether additional checks are applied later in the onboarding process was not tested.

BingX: The Strictest Sign-Up Flow

BingX has publicly disclosed its MiCA status. In a June 16 update, BingX EU said it had applied for CASP authorisation with Austria's FMA and that the application was at an advanced stage, although not yet approved.

Among the exchanges tested, BingX presented the strictest registration flow. Finance Magnates was unable to proceed with registration from an EU IP, with no visible workaround offered during the initial sign-up process.

HTX and Bitfinex: No Public Statement, Registration Still Available

Neither exchange has publicly commented on its MiCA application status or outlined plans for EU users. That lack of communication is reflected by an absence of visible changes during registration.

Finance Magnates was able to access the sign-up process on both platforms, and each exchange's published restricted-jurisdictions list continues to omit EU member states.

No Single Approach Emerged

Finance Magnates' test found no consistent pattern in how unlicensed exchanges are handling new EU users after MiCA's transition period expired.

Binance, Bitget and BingX each introduced friction during sign-up, in different forms and to different degrees. HTX and Bitfinex showed no visible change, consistent with having made no public statement at all. MEXC's experience also showed no visible change, but its published jurisdictions list has not been updated since May.

What happens after registration, including identity verification, account approval and access to deposits, trading or withdrawals, could not be independently verified through this methodology.

Methodology: Finance Magnates tested publicly accessible sign-up flows from EU-based IP addresses on July 1, 2026, without using existing customer accounts. The review covers only the initial registration experience and does not assess subsequent KYC procedures, account approval, or access to trading, deposits and withdrawals for existing or newly registered users.

This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.
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