EU Moves Toward Centralized Crypto Oversight as MiCA Enforcement Intensifies
Europe’s crypto sector is shifting from rulemaking to enforcement, and the tone across the bloc has changed noticeably.
With MiCA now fully in effect, policymakers are no longer asking how to regulate crypto – they’re asking how to tighten the system and eliminate gaps.
One major idea gaining traction in Brussels is a move to remove crypto supervision from national regulators and hand it directly to ESMA. Officials argue that a market operating across borders cannot be effectively policed by 27 different authorities working at different speeds. A single EU-level supervisor, they say, would reduce inconsistencies and prevent regulatory loopholes as crypto activity becomes more integrated across the region.
At the same time, firms have accelerated their push toward full compliance. In the past week alone, Revolut, Blockchain.com, and Relai secured MiCA authorizations, giving them the ability to operate across the entire EEA. The rapid pace of approvals suggests that MiCA is becoming not just a legal requirement but a competitive differentiator. Companies with licenses can scale; those without face narrowing options.
ESMA Guidance, Stablecoin Scrutiny, and Regional Pressure
Even without formal supervisory authority, ESMA is already exerting more influence. Its latest technical updates – part of November’s investment management package – provide additional clarity on service classifications, operational expectations, and disclosure requirements. Traditional finance firms exploring digital assets are treating these clarifications as de facto rules.
Stablecoins remain another focal point. Following recent concerns from the European Banking Authority, policymakers are reviewing reserve structures, multi-issuer models, and how issuers should meet MiCA’s Article 30 obligations. Since stablecoins underpin both trading and payments infrastructure, regulators see this as one of the most consequential components of the framework.
A more urgent challenge is unfolding in Romania, where MiCA’s transitional regime expires on November 30, 2025. After that date, all crypto providers must hold full authorization or exit the market. Smaller companies and OTC operators could face significant pressure as the deadline approaches.
A More Demanding Regulatory Era Begins
The developments of recent weeks point in a unified direction: MiCA is no longer something the market is waiting to implement — it is actively reshaping the industry. Oversight is becoming more centralized, licensing is accelerating, and regulatory expectations across the EU are rising rapidly.
For crypto businesses, the message is clear: the grace period is ending, and Europe is moving into a phase where compliance is not a milestone but a constant requirement.

Fill in necessary fields and publish