France’s Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) is rapidly escalating its warnings to crypto firms as the MiCA licensing transition deadline approaches. According to Reuters, the AMF has made clear that crypto firms that continue serving European customers without obtaining an EU license by the end of June may face tough measures — including blacklisting, litigation, and even criminal liability. AMF Chair Marie-Anne Barbat-Layani put it this way: “Completing the license application process is becoming very, very urgent.” This is one of the most direct signals a single member-state regulator has sent about unlicensed operations as MiCA moves into full applicability.
Editorial Take: Which USDT Card Users Are Affected
Let’s state the conclusion up front: the AMF’s pressure this time targets crypto asset service providers (CASPs) that serve European customers but haven’t obtained a MiCA license — not end cardholders directly. But once the upstream issuing chain comes under pressure, downstream card products tend to adjust accordingly.
What warrants the most attention are products whose card BIN is registered in the EU, and whose issuer or partner relies on EU regulatory credentials. Issuers like Wirex — which have long been embedded in the EU market via the EMI/CASP route — are at the core of this round of MiCA licensing scrutiny. For specifics on its licensing progress, see the issuing entity details we’ve compiled in our Wirex review. The same applies to Crypto.com’s EU-regulated products; our Crypto.com Visa review breaks down its compliance entities across different regions.
By comparison, products running Asia-Pacific rails with card BINs outside the EU face much less direct exposure this round. Our editorially selected MPCard focuses on Asia Elite, an Asia-Pacific-rail Visa whose issuance chain doesn’t depend on the French AMF’s licensing regime, so this event carries no direct regulatory impact for it. But for users based in the EU who want to use a non-EU BIN card to sidestep MiCA, that’s precisely another risk point — more on this below.
Time-window expectations:
- Within 7 days: No mass card freezes. The AMF is setting a deadline, not enforcing it same-day.
- Within 30 days (by end of June): Unlicensed EU-based issuers may proactively suspend some European card issuance, tighten KYC for new users, or adjust serviceable regions.
- Within 90 days: Heavier measures like blacklisting and litigation would actually land, at which point affected products’ terms of service would likely be rewritten.
Historical Comparison: How This Differs from the 2024 MiCA Legislative Timeline
MiCA’s legislative timeline is familiar to most: the stablecoin provisions (Title III/IV) took effect first on June 30, 2024, the CASP provisions became fully applicable on December 30, 2024, and member states could set transition periods of up to 18 months. Over the past year-plus, the market has largely treated this transition period as a “buffer” — many issuers operated while filling in paperwork on the side.
What’s the same as before: the regulatory stance remains “get licensed first, then serve European customers” — the logic hasn’t changed.
What’s different comes down to two things. First, the pace has shifted from a “legislative countdown” to an “enforcement countdown” — Barbat-Layani’s phrase “very, very urgent” signals that the transition-period grace is nearing its end. Second, this time criminal liability has been explicitly put on the table, not just administrative fines. This is fundamentally different in nature from a “market risk event” like USDC’s brief depeg in 2023: the USDC depeg was a liquidity issue that self-resolved within days, whereas MiCA enforcement is a structural licensing threshold — once you cross the line, it’s a hard compliance/non-compliance switch that doesn’t “self-resolve.”
Compliance Boundaries: What’s Gray Area Now, and What’s Already Clear
Based on the current MiCA framework and the AMF’s stated position, the lines can be drawn as follows:
- Clearly permitted: Issuers that have obtained a MiCA CASP license, or that hold a legacy license from their home member state within a legitimate transition period, may continue serving EU customers.
- Gray area: Issuers still in the application process, whose transition period hasn’t yet expired — this is precisely the gray area the AMF is now trying to compress.
- Clearly targeted for pressure: Issuers that remain unlicensed after the deadline but continue soliciting European customers fall within range of blacklisting, litigation, or criminal liability.
Worth noting is a point ESMA has repeatedly emphasized: MiCA regulates the act of “providing services to EU customers,” not where a card BIN is registered. So “being in the EU while using an Asia-Pacific BIN card” doesn’t automatically grant exemption — what regulators look at is service accessibility. For a detailed breakdown of the EU-side boundaries, see our EU USDT Card Compliance Guide, which lays out MiCA obligations for both cardholders and issuers. The AMF’s original statement can be found in Tokenpost’s report.
Key Milestones Worth Watching
- End of June: The AMF’s “soft deadline” for licensing — watch for whether specific issuers get named or proactively scale back their European business.
- End of June through early July: Terms-of-service pages and official announcements from EU-based issuers like Wirex and Crypto.com — terms revisions often precede press releases.
- Ripple effects beyond France: Whether Germany’s BaFin and Ireland’s CBI follow with similar enforcement timelines will determine whether this is a French-only move or a broader EU-wide clampdown.
- At the ESMA level: Whether more detailed guidance emerges on cross-border services and third-country issuers accessing EU customers.
Editorial Recommendations
- Users holding MPCard Asia Elite or similar Asia-Pacific-rail cards, who don’t primarily use them within the EU: No action needed for this event.
- Users based in the EU whose primary card is an EU-based product like Wirex or Crypto.com Visa: Keep an eye on issuer announcements before end of June, watching for changes to serviceable regions or KYC requirements. There’s no need to rush to cancel cards or make large prepayments — enforcement rollout has a pace, and blacklisting doesn’t take effect same-day.
- Users planning to apply for a new EU-based USDT card: Consider holding off for 30 days on the application, waiting until after the end-of-June milestone to see which issuers secure their licenses before deciding — this avoids opening a card whose serviceable scope could shift at any time.
- EU residents hoping to use a non-EU BIN card to “get around” MiCA: Don’t treat this as a compliance strategy — regulators look at who’s being served, not where the BIN is registered. Compliance-first users should first read the EU Compliance Guide, then make longer-term choices with reference to 5 Cards Worth Using in 2026.
The core principle during a regulatory tightening period is simple: don’t make large, irreversible moves right around the deadline. Wait for the licensing dust to settle before deciding which card to put your money on.