The EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) transition period for existing crypto-asset service providers (CASPs) is expiring. MiCA’s provisions on stablecoins (asset-referenced tokens, ARTs, and e-money tokens, EMTs) already took effect on June 30, 2024. For service providers that were already operating before the transition period began, individual member states may set their own “grandfathering” transition windows, extending at most to around July 1, 2025 (the exact deadline varies by member state and should be confirmed against each national competent authority’s official notices). As this window closes, stablecoins that have not obtained MiCA authorization — most notably Tether’s USDT — face gradual delisting from regulated exchanges within the EU. MiCA’s regulatory framework and timeline can be verified on the ESMA official page.
Editorial take: “USDT delisting” does not mean “your U card stops working”
This is where readers most easily get confused, and it’s the point most worth clarifying in this story. The expiry of the MiCA transition period affects spot trading and exchange listing of USDT on EU-regulated exchanges — it governs whether an exchange can offer USDT buy/sell services to EU users. It does not directly mean “the USDT you top up into your virtual card can no longer be used.”
The two need to be considered separately:
- Exchange spot trading: EU exchanges (platforms licensed within the EU) may delist USDT trading pairs, narrowing the channels EU residents have for buying and selling USDT.
- U card top-ups and spending: U card issuers typically convert USDT into fiat at the card level before routing through Visa/Mastercard clearing. Whether a card still works depends on where the issuer is registered, its compliance licenses, and which region of users it serves — not on whether one particular EU exchange delists USDT.
So how much you’re affected depends heavily on which card you use and where you’re located:
- Asia-Pacific-route cards from non-EU issuers: Minimal direct impact. Asia-Pacific-route virtual cards such as MPCard’s Asia Elite variant don’t rely on EU exchanges’ USDT listing status for their top-up and clearing chain — day-to-day usage for Asia-Pacific users is unaffected.
- Cards for EU residents issued by EU-licensed issuers: Watch issuer announcements closely. Products deeply serving EU users, such as Wirex, are more likely to issue notices about changes to top-up currencies or funding channels as stablecoin settlement structures shift.
- Exchange-native cards: If your card is tied to an exchange account (for example, Bybit Card) and that exchange adjusts its USDT services in the EU region, the step of “topping up the card with USDT from your exchange account” may be affected — but that’s a limitation on the exchange’s side, not the card itself becoming invalid.
(The following is editorial forecasting, not a verifiable fact): Within the next 7 days, EU-licensed exchanges are expected to issue announcements about USDT trading pairs one after another; within 30 days, USDT spot trading channels for EU residents will likely narrow further, with some platforms possibly guiding users toward already-authorized EMTs; within 90 days, market focus may shift toward stablecoins holding MiCA authorization. The actual pace will depend on official announcements from individual exchanges and issuers.
To understand the underlying mechanics of U cards and why “delisting” and “shutdown” are two different things, see What Is a U Card.
Historical comparison: how this differs from the 2023 USDC depeg and the MiCA legislative timeline
It’s easy to misread this as “something has gone wrong with USDT,” but it is fundamentally different from the brief USDC depeg in March 2023. That 2023 event was a reserve bank risk incident — part of Circle’s reserves were held at Silicon Valley Bank, and market panic caused USDC to briefly fall below its peg. That was a crisis of market confidence, unrelated to the token’s own regulatory standing, and the peg recovered within days as the reserve situation became clear.
This time it’s a regulatory access issue: there’s been no sudden event affecting USDT’s price or reserves. The issue is that Tether chose not to apply for MiCA’s e-money institution (EMI) authorization, and so it cannot continue to be listed as a regulated EMT within the EU. This isn’t a “depeg” — it’s an “access threshold” problem.
One point that’s often confused deserves clarification: USDC and EURC are two separate products under Circle. Circle obtained EMI authorization in the EU through its French entity, allowing its US dollar stablecoin USDC and euro stablecoin EURC to operate compliantly under the MiCA framework — these are two independent product lines and shouldn’t be conflated. USDT “exiting” and USDC/EURC “staying compliant” essentially reflect different strategic choices each issuer made regarding EU regulation.
As for circulating statistics claiming “only around 194 companies have obtained formal licenses under the MiCA regime,” we currently lack a primary official source to support this (some versions attribute it to exchanges’ own compilations), so we won’t adopt it — defer to the authorization lists published by ESMA and individual member states’ competent authorities.
Regulatory and compliance boundaries: what’s actually allowed right now
For USDT virtual card users, the current regulatory boundary can be drawn as follows:
- Clearly restricted: EU-regulated exchanges offering spot trading services for unauthorized stablecoins (USDT) to EU residents are restricted after the transition period.
- Legal gray area / structure-dependent: EU residents using virtual cards topped up with USDT — this depends on whether the issuer is licensed in the EU and how the clearing structure is arranged. Practices vary by issuer; there’s no blanket ban.
- Largely unaffected by this issue directly: Non-EU residents using Asia-Pacific-route cards from non-EU entities are not directly restricted by this MiCA transition expiry.
EU users can refer to the EU compliance guide to understand the compliance boundaries for cardholders under the MiCA framework.
Worth noting for readers in South Korea, Japan, and elsewhere in Asia-Pacific: the Korean media coverage of this story focuses on “what it implies for South Korea’s stablecoin legislation.” South Korea currently has no stablecoin-specific law equivalent to MiCA, and this site doesn’t have a dedicated South Korea compliance page; a nearby jurisdiction with a more mature regulatory framework can be found in the Japan compliance guide.
Milestones worth watching next
- Announcements from national competent authorities: The MiCA transition expiry date varies by member state — watch the USDT delisting timeline for your specific member state’s regulator, not a general “July” date.
- USDT announcements from EU-licensed exchanges: Whether clear delisting dates and alternatives are provided in the coming weeks.
- Official notices from your issuer: Whether EU-related issuers adjust top-up currencies or funding channels — this is the signal that directly determines whether your card keeps working.
- Updates to the MiCA authorization list: Refer to ESMA’s public disclosures to see which stablecoins and service providers make it onto the compliance whitelist.
Editorial recommendations
- Holders of Asia-Pacific-route cards (such as MPCard Asia Elite) who are not in the EU: No action needed — this event does not affect your day-to-day top-ups and spending.
- EU residents: First confirm whether your issuer is EU-licensed and whether it has issued any announcement. There’s no need to panic-redeem before an official notice arrives; however, we do not recommend parking large amounts of USDT long-term in spot accounts on EU-regulated exchanges during this period — keep only the balance you need for normal deposits and withdrawals.
- Users who top up via a linked exchange account (such as Bybit Card): Watch for that exchange’s EU-region USDT service announcements, and switch to a different top-up currency or route if needed.
- Anyone planning to apply for a new USDT card in the EU: Consider holding off for about 30 days until the transition deadline details for individual member states and issuers’ response plans have settled.
Bottom line: this is an EU exchange spot-access issue, not a case of USDT itself “going wrong” — and it certainly doesn’t mean all U cards are shutting down. Figure out which card you use and where you’re located first, before deciding whether to act.