Europe’s crypto market resets on July 1, when MiCA’s transitional period ends and unauthorized exchanges lose the legal right to operate in the EU.
Whether the deadline holds depends on the app stores on European phones.
Under the ESMA’s June 23 statement, unauthorized crypto exchanges must immediately stop onboarding new EU clients, opening accounts, and marketing or soliciting business once the transitional period ends.
Activity has to narrow to selling or transferring assets, closing positions, and holding custody only as long as strictly necessary.
Clients who stay with a platform outside that perimeter lose MiCA’s protections entirely, including the safeguards covering client assets.
Erald Ghoos, CEO of OKX Europe, told CryptoSlate that the practical outcome depends on whether offshore platforms can still look available to European users through working apps, localized support, and reverse-solicitation claims.
Ghoos said:
“The most immediate risk is delayed or blocked access to assets. The operational priority shifts from serving clients to managing the firm’s own survival. That’s when withdrawal queues lengthen, support goes silent, and users can’t act quickly enough.”
Ghoos pointed to Zondacrypto’s collapse in Poland as a recent example of that sequence playing out. Open positions, staking lockups, fiat off-ramps, and tax records all sit inside that exit window.

ESMA’s own statement acknowledges the risk, telling unauthorized firms to communicate clearly and repeatedly with clients and to maintain anti-money-laundering controls through the close-out.
Ghoos says crypto deposits to OKX from non-MiCA-licensed platforms have grown 5.5 times since the week of Apr. 13. Nearly 90% of deposits last week came from unlicensed platforms, up from 69% in April.
Those figures describe inflows to a single licensed venue, but they show users moving weeks before the legal deadline took effect.
A user checks whether the app is still in the store, whether login still works, and whether the deposit clears. Ghoos frames the next phase of enforcement around that disconnect:
“Some unlicensed exchanges are signaling that they aren’t going away. Enforcement will be what determines which direction the displaced volume flows.”
MiCA’s reverse-solicitation exception protects a transaction only when an EU client approaches a third-country firm on their own exclusive initiative.
Ghoos describes the carve-out’s limits:
“What qualifies as reverse solicitation is actually very narrow, applying only when an EU client has, on their own initiative, sought out a third-country firm with no support in the local language or any localization allowed.”
ESMA’s guidance treats EU-language apps, push notifications, affiliates, and sponsorships as evidence that a transaction wasn’t genuinely client-initiated, regardless of any disclaimer.
If unlicensed apps stay downloadable in European stores, Ghoos says, “certain offshore exchanges will continue to look for ways to circumvent regulatory obligations in Europe.”
MiCA defines an “online interface” broadly enough to cover an application, and Article 94 allows competent authorities to request the removal of, or restricted access to, an online interface when no other effective measure exists and the case requires preventing serious harm. Apple’s App Store and Google Play sit inside that reach too.


The European Commission lists both as very large online platforms under the Digital Services Act, with Apple’s App Store reaching 123 million EU monthly users and Google Play reaching 284.6 million, according to the Commission’s latest figures.
Apple already runs a notice-and-action channel under that law for illegal-content complaints tied to the App Store.
In September, the Commission sent information requests to Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Booking.com about how each platform screens for fraudulent apps that imitate banking and trading services.
Removal requests under Article 94 are handled on a case-by-case basis, often require a proportionality finding, and can be brought before national courts.
The Digital Markets Act has also forced open alternative app distribution and web-based installs on iOS inside the EU, so a clean delisting from Apple’s or Google’s official stores may cut mainstream reach without closing access for users willing to look elsewhere.
The favorable path has app stores, payment processors, and national regulators moving together at speed: unauthorized apps get pulled or geo-blocked, EU onboarding shuts down cleanly, and reverse-solicitation claims don’t survive review.
Under that path, licensed exchanges absorb most of the displaced volume, and the consolidation that MiCA was built to produce shows up in the user numbers.
The opposite path runs through unauthorized platforms stripping explicit EU branding from their marketing, leaning on affiliates and influencers instead of direct ads, and keeping their apps live behind disclaimers about client-initiated contact.
| Scenario | What users see | What regulators test | Market outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clean consolidation | Unlicensed apps are removed or geo-blocked; deposits and onboarding stop | Whether app stores, payment rails, and national regulators coordinate quickly | Licensed exchanges absorb most displaced volume |
| Gray-market persistence | Apps remain downloadable; EU-facing language disappears; affiliates and influencers keep traffic alive | Whether reverse-solicitation claims survive scrutiny | Some volume moves offshore, outside MiCA protections |
| Disorderly exit | Withdrawals slow, support fails, staking exits or open positions become difficult | Whether regulators can protect users during wind-downs | User harm becomes the main MiCA enforcement story |
MiCA leaves an unsupervised market that runs outside the asset protections ESMA says no longer apply once a platform falls outside the authorized perimeter.
Ghoos said that “MiCA creates real consolidation,” describing a smaller field of licensed exchanges serving “a larger share of a more confident user base.” But he draws a line around what that consolidation captures: only users who move to a licensed platform.
He added:
“The ones who go offshore are a real loss, and the risk could be higher than expected.”
The clearer difference, in his view, shows up on July 2. A platform genuinely ready for MiCA runs the same product suite that day as it did the day before, backed by the regulatory permissions to keep doing so.


Making access inconvenient enough for users to leave post-MiCA is a separate fight that plays out through 2026 in app-store takedown requests, reverse-solicitation rulings, and withdrawal queues at platforms still operating as though July 1 never arrived.


















































