FX-Brokers.eu
Menu
Trusted by traders25 brokers tested2,470+ pages indexedIndependent since 2024Updated daily

Regulatory Guide · May 2026

Which Forex Brokers Are MiCA-Ready? EU Crypto CFD Guide [July 2026]

The MiCA transitional period ends 1 July 2026— 36 days from now. After that date, only brokers holding a CASP authorisation or national-law equivalent may offer crypto-asset services to EU clients. This page compares the MiCA readiness of EU-regulated forex brokers that offer cryptocurrency CFDs.

Deadline Alert

1 July 2026:EU member states' MiCA transitional provisions expire. Crypto-asset service providers without a CASP authorisation must cease offering crypto services to EU retail clients. If you hold crypto positions or trade crypto CFDs with an EU broker, confirm their MiCA status before this date.

MiCA status information below is based on publicly available regulatory filings and broker disclosures as of June 2026. Verify current authorisation status on ESMA's public register.

ESMA Risk Warning

CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. Between 74-89% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

What MiCA Means for EU Crypto Traders

The Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) is the EU's harmonised regulatory framework for digital assets. It replaced the patchwork of national crypto regulations with a single rulebook covering issuance, trading, and custody of crypto-assets across all 27 member states.

MiCA entered full application on 30 December 2024, but included a transitional provision: EU member states could allow existing crypto-asset service providers to continue operating under national rules for up to 18 months while their MiCA authorisation applications were processed. That 18-month window closes on 1 July 2026.

For retail traders, the practical implications are:

  • Brokers offering crypto services must hold a CASP (Crypto-Asset Service Provider) authorisation from their national competent authority, or be authorised as a credit institution or MiFID investment firm with a MiCA extension.
  • Unauthorised providers must cease crypto services to EU clients after 1 July 2026.
  • Existing positions may need to be wound down or transferred if a broker fails to obtain authorisation.
  • Crypto CFDs traded under MiFID II are a separate regulatory track, but most brokers are obtaining CASP authorisation alongside their existing MiFID licence for operational flexibility.

MiCA Readiness Comparison — EU Forex Brokers with Crypto CFDs

Sorted by MiCA status, then overall editorial score. Status reflects publicly available information as of June 2026.

BrokerMiCA StatusCrypto InstrumentsEU EntityLicenceScore
eToroApplied / Pending100+ crypto assets (CFDs + real ownership)eToro (Europe) LtdCySEC 109/108.5
PepperstoneTransitional provision25+ crypto CFDsPepperstone GmbHBaFin 1511489.4
IGApplied / Pending15+ crypto CFDsIG Europe GmbHBaFin 1487599.2
EightcapTransitional provision250+ crypto CFDsEightcap EU LtdCySEC 246/148.4
CMC MarketsApplied / Pending20+ crypto CFDsCMC Markets Germany GmbHBaFin 1548148.9
Plus500Transitional provision15+ crypto CFDsPlus500CY LtdCySEC 250/148.1
ExnessTransitional provision35+ crypto CFDsExness (Cy) LtdCySEC 178/129.4
XMTransitional provision30+ crypto CFDsTrading Point of Financial Instruments LtdCySEC 120/108.7
Capital.comApplied / Pending200+ crypto CFDsCapital Com SV Investments LtdCySEC 319/178.6
SwissquoteApplied / Pending40+ crypto assets (CFDs + real ownership)Swissquote Bank SAFINMA (Swiss banking licence)8.8

“Applied / Pending” = the broker has publicly indicated it has applied for or is pursuing MiCA CASP authorisation. “Transitional provision” = operating under the member-state transitional regime pending authorisation. “Not confirmed” = no public disclosure of MiCA application status found. All statuses are editorial assessments, not legal advice.

Broker-by-Broker MiCA Assessment

Our editorial take on each broker's crypto offering and MiCA readiness.

eToro

Applied / Pending8.5/10

eToro acquired a MiCA CASP licence application in multiple EU jurisdictions. Offers both crypto CFDs and real coin custody via eToro Money.

Crypto Range
100+ crypto assets (CFDs + real ownership)
EU Entity
eToro (Europe) Ltd
Licence
CySEC 109/10
Min Deposit
$50
Read ReviewIs it safe?This broker does not accept new clients from your region

Pepperstone

Transitional provision9.4/10

Operating crypto CFDs under the MiCA transitional regime via its BaFin-regulated entity. Germany adopted the transitional provision allowing existing providers to continue until 1 July 2026.

Crypto Range
25+ crypto CFDs
EU Entity
Pepperstone GmbH
Licence
BaFin 151148
Min Deposit
None

IG

Applied / Pending9.2/10

IG Europe is BaFin-regulated and has publicly indicated pursuit of MiCA compliance. Listed on the London Stock Exchange (FTSE 250).

Crypto Range
15+ crypto CFDs
EU Entity
IG Europe GmbH
Licence
BaFin 148759
Min Deposit
None
Read ReviewIs it safe?This broker does not accept new clients from your region

Eightcap

Transitional provision8.4/10

Largest crypto CFD range among regulated brokers. Operating under CySEC transitional provision for crypto services.

Crypto Range
250+ crypto CFDs
EU Entity
Eightcap EU Ltd
Licence
CySEC 246/14
Min Deposit
$100
Read ReviewIs it safe?This broker does not accept new clients from your region

CMC Markets

Applied / Pending8.9/10

FTSE 250-listed. BaFin-regulated EU entity with established crypto CFD offering.

Crypto Range
20+ crypto CFDs
EU Entity
CMC Markets Germany GmbH
Licence
BaFin 154814
Min Deposit
None
Read ReviewIs it safe?This broker does not accept new clients from your region

Plus500

Transitional provision8.1/10

London Stock Exchange-listed. Offers crypto CFDs through its CySEC entity under transitional provision.

Crypto Range
15+ crypto CFDs
EU Entity
Plus500CY Ltd
Licence
CySEC 250/14
Min Deposit
€100
Read ReviewIs it safe?This broker does not accept new clients from your region

Exness

Transitional provision9.4/10

Operating crypto CFDs through CySEC entity. One of the highest-volume retail brokers globally.

Crypto Range
35+ crypto CFDs
EU Entity
Exness (Cy) Ltd
Licence
CySEC 178/12
Min Deposit
$10

XM

Transitional provision8.7/10

CySEC-regulated with a broad crypto CFD range. Strong in education and multilingual support.

Crypto Range
30+ crypto CFDs
EU Entity
Trading Point of Financial Instruments Ltd
Licence
CySEC 120/10
Min Deposit
$5

Capital.com

Applied / Pending8.6/10

AI-driven platform with one of the broadest crypto CFD selections. Has indicated MiCA licence pursuit.

Crypto Range
200+ crypto CFDs
EU Entity
Capital Com SV Investments Ltd
Licence
CySEC 319/17
Min Deposit
€20
Read ReviewIs it safe?This broker does not accept new clients from your region

Swissquote

Applied / Pending8.8/10

Swiss banking licence holder. Offers real crypto custody alongside CFDs. Pursuing MiCA authorisation for EU crypto services.

Crypto Range
40+ crypto assets (CFDs + real ownership)
EU Entity
Swissquote Bank SA
Licence
FINMA (Swiss banking licence)
Min Deposit
$1000
Read ReviewIs it safe?This broker does not accept new clients from your region

What Happens to Your Crypto Positions After 1 July?

The outcome depends on whether your broker obtains MiCA CASP authorisation before the deadline and on the specific crypto services they offer.

ScenarioWhat HappensYour Action
Broker obtains CASP authorisationNo disruption. Crypto services continue as normal under the new MiCA framework.None required. Verify authorisation on ESMA's register for peace of mind.
Broker's application is still pendingDepends on the NCA. Some member states may grant extensions; others may require the broker to pause new crypto onboarding while existing positions remain open.Contact your broker for their specific transition plan. Consider reducing open crypto exposure if uncertain.
Broker has not appliedThe broker must cease crypto services to EU clients. Open positions may be forcibly closed or transferred. The exact mechanism depends on the NCA and the broker's wind-down plan.Close or transfer your crypto positions before the deadline. Move to a MiCA-authorised broker.
Broker offers only crypto CFDs (no custody/exchange)Crypto CFDs are regulated under MiFID II, not MiCA. These may continue under the broker's existing MiFID licence without a separate CASP authorisation.Confirm with your broker whether their crypto offering is CFD-only or includes services falling under MiCA.

This is an editorial summary, not legal advice. Regulatory outcomes may vary by member state and individual broker circumstances.

How to Check If Your Broker Is MiCA-Authorised

1

Check ESMA’s public register

ESMA maintains a centralised register of authorised crypto-asset service providers across the EU. Search by firm name or licence number. This is the single most authoritative source.

2

Check your national competent authority

Each NCA (BaFin, CySEC, AMF, etc.) maintains its own register. If your broker’s EU entity is in Cyprus, check CySEC’s register. If in Germany, check BaFin. Cross-reference with ESMA for completeness.

3

Ask your broker directly

Send a written enquiry asking: (1) Have you applied for MiCA CASP authorisation? (2) Which NCA is processing your application? (3) What is your plan for existing crypto positions if authorisation is delayed? A regulated broker should answer all three without hesitation.

4

Review the broker’s legal pages

Check the broker’s Terms of Service, regulatory disclosures, and any MiCA-specific communications. Many brokers have published client notices about their MiCA transition plans.

5

Monitor the deadline

Set a reminder for late June 2026. If your broker has not confirmed MiCA authorisation by then, consider closing crypto positions or transferring to a confirmed provider before 1 July.

Crypto CFDs vs MiCA-Regulated Crypto Services

A key distinction that determines which regulatory framework applies.

AspectCrypto CFDsMiCA-Regulated Crypto
Regulatory FrameworkMiFID II / ESMA intervention measuresMiCA (Regulation (EU) 2023/1114)
Licence RequiredMiFID investment firm licenceCASP authorisation (or credit institution / MiFID firm with MiCA extension)
Asset OwnershipNo — contract with the brokerYes — direct ownership and custody
Leverage (Retail)1:2 under ESMA capsNot applicable (1:1)
Affected by 1 July Deadline?Indirectly — many brokers are obtaining CASP authorisation alongside MiFID licenceDirectly — must have CASP authorisation to continue
ExamplesBTC/USD CFD at Pepperstone, ETH/EUR CFD at ExnessReal BTC purchase at eToro, crypto custody at Swissquote

Related Guides

Frequently Asked Questions

What is MiCA and when does it fully apply?
MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation) is the EU's comprehensive regulatory framework for crypto-assets. It entered into force on 29 June 2023, with stablecoin provisions applying from 30 June 2024 and full application from 30 December 2024. The transitional period allowing existing crypto-asset service providers (CASPs) to continue operating under national rules ends on 1 July 2026.
What happens to my crypto positions after 1 July 2026 if my broker is not MiCA-authorised?
After 1 July 2026, brokers without a MiCA CASP authorisation or national-law equivalent will not be permitted to offer crypto-asset services to EU clients. If your broker has not obtained authorisation, they may be required to wind down crypto positions, transfer them to an authorised entity, or restrict new crypto trading. The exact process depends on the broker and the national competent authority. Contact your broker directly to ask about their MiCA transition plan.
How do I check if my broker has a MiCA CASP licence?
ESMA maintains a public register of authorised crypto-asset service providers at esma.europa.eu. You can also check your national competent authority's register (e.g. BaFin in Germany, AMF in France, CySEC in Cyprus). Brokers operating under the transitional provision should be able to provide documentation of their national registration and MiCA application status on request.
Does MiCA affect crypto CFDs or only real crypto ownership?
MiCA primarily targets crypto-asset services including custody, exchange, and transfer of crypto-assets. Crypto CFDs (contracts for difference) are already regulated under MiFID II and the ESMA intervention measures. However, brokers offering both CFDs and real crypto services need MiCA authorisation for the non-CFD portion. Brokers offering only crypto CFDs may not need a separate CASP licence, but many are obtaining one for operational flexibility and to future-proof their offering.
What is the MiCA transitional provision?
MiCA allows EU member states to grant a transitional period of up to 18 months (until 1 July 2026) during which existing crypto-asset service providers can continue operating under national rules while their MiCA authorisation applications are processed. Each member state chose whether to adopt this provision and for how long. Germany, France, and most other member states adopted the full 18-month transition.
Which EU regulators handle MiCA authorisation?
MiCA authorisation is handled by national competent authorities (NCAs) in each EU member state: BaFin in Germany, AMF in France, CySEC in Cyprus, CONSOB in Italy, CNMV in Spain, and so on. ESMA coordinates at the EU level and maintains the central register of authorised CASPs. The NCA in the member state where the firm is established processes the application.
Are UK-regulated brokers affected by MiCA?
MiCA is an EU regulation and does not apply in the United Kingdom. UK-based brokers serving EU clients through an EU-regulated entity (e.g. a CySEC or BaFin subsidiary) must comply with MiCA for their EU operations. The UK has its own crypto regulatory framework under the FCA. Brokers like IG and Pepperstone hold both UK (FCA) and EU (BaFin) licences and must comply with MiCA for their EU entity.
Will MiCA change the leverage limits on crypto CFDs?
MiCA does not directly set leverage limits for crypto CFDs. Leverage caps on crypto CFDs (currently 1:2 for retail clients) are set by ESMA under the MiFID II product intervention measures, not MiCA. These limits remain in place regardless of MiCA. ESMA could in theory revise them, but no changes have been announced.

CFD Risk Warning

CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. Between 74-89% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

This website is for informational purposes only. The content does not constitute investment advice. Trading leveraged products carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results. EU retail leverage limits apply (ESMA): up to 30:1 on major FX pairs, 20:1 on minor FX, 20:1 on major indices, 10:1 on commodities, 5:1 on equities, 2:1 on crypto.