Is MEXC Banned in Europe? The MiCA Deadline and the Unlicensed Exit, Explained
MEXC holds no MiCA licence, so from July 1, 2026 it cannot legally serve residents of the European Economic Area — and for EU users the practical effect is a shutdown of access. Here is exactly what is changing, why, what it means for your funds, and what EU traders can do next.

Key takeaways
- MEXC holds no MiCA licence, so from July 1, 2026 it cannot legally serve residents of the European Economic Area (EEA) — and for EU users the practical effect is a shutdown of access, not a regulated local product to migrate to.
- Under MiCA, from July 1, 2026 any crypto firm serving the EEA must hold a MiCA (CASP) licence from a member state; an unlicensed exchange operating illegally must cease serving EU users.
- MEXC is among the exchanges expected to exit or be restricted in the EU because it has not secured a MiCA authorisation — unlike licensed venues that localised to stay.
- EEA users on a custodial exchange that is losing access should withdraw balances they are not actively trading to a wallet they control while withdrawals are still open.
- Traders who do not want their access decided by a venue’s licence are turning to non-custodial apps like Dexly — a front-end to the Hyperliquid exchange where you trade from your own wallet, with no account to suspend and no region to be licensed out of.
What Is Happening: MEXC and the MiCA Deadline
MEXC is on the wrong side of Europe’s new rulebook. Under the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), from July 1, 2026 any crypto firm serving the European Economic Area (EEA) must hold a MiCA licence from a member state. MEXC is not listed in the ESMA CASP register as MiCA-authorised (ESMA — Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) & register of authorised CASPs) — so an exchange that kept serving EU users would be operating illegally and must cease serving them. MEXC is among the exchanges expected to exit or be restricted in the EU as a result (Bitcoin Market — MiCA exchange compliance 2026: full CASP table (who is licensed, who is leaving)).
- The MiCA bar — to serve the EEA, a crypto firm must obtain a Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP) licence from an EU member state, which can then be passported across the bloc.
- MEXC’s status — MiCA compliance trackers list MEXC among the exchanges that have not secured a CASP licence, unlike venues that localised to stay (Bitcoin Market — MiCA exchange compliance 2026: full CASP table (who is licensed, who is leaving)).
- July 1, 2026 — MiCA’s transition period ends. An unlicensed exchange can no longer legally serve EEA residents; for those users the practical effect is a shutdown of access.
So is MEXC “banned” in Europe?
So Is MEXC Banned in Europe?
In practical terms, yes. To be precise about the mechanism: MEXC is not the subject of a specific government press release you can cite — rather, it is unlicensed under MiCA, and MiCA makes serving the EEA without a licence illegal from July 1, 2026. The honest framing is that MEXC is unlicensed under MiCA and therefore unable to legally serve EEA users after July 1 — which, for EU residents, lands as a shutdown of access.
This is a different outcome from Binance, which is exiting the EU on July 1, or from venues like Bybit that secured a MiCA licence and localised to stay. MEXC, without an authorisation, falls into the group simply restricted out of the bloc (Bitcoin Market — MiCA exchange compliance 2026: full CASP table (who is licensed, who is leaving)).
Why an Unlicensed Exchange Has to Go
MiCA was designed to consolidate the EU’s crypto market under a single, demanding licensing standard. That bar is high enough that many venues will not clear it:
- A costly, slow authorisation. Securing a CASP licence requires capital, governance and compliance commitments that not every exchange chooses or manages to meet.
- Most won’t make it. OKX’s Europe chief has warned that roughly 80% of crypto exchanges will not survive MiCA as the deadline nears (The Block — OKX Europe chief: 80% of crypto exchanges won’t survive MiCA as the deadline nears).
- No half-measures. An unlicensed exchange cannot legally keep EEA users on the side — serving them at all without a licence is the violation, so restriction or exit is the only compliant path.
The structural point
What EEA Users Should Do Before July 1
If you are an EEA resident with funds on MEXC, you have three practical paths:
- Withdraw — move balances you are not actively trading to a wallet or platform you control while withdrawals are still open. Do not wait until access is curtailed.
- Move to a licensed CEX — complete KYC on a MiCA-authorised venue and accept its curated product set.
- Switch to a non-custodial venue — trade from your own wallet, where there is no account to suspend in the first place.
The sensible move before a deadline
What Are Your Options?
EEA traders leaving MEXC generally pick one of two models:
A licensed CEX
Bybit EU, Kraken, Coinbase or OKX — custodial and KYC-based, each with its own product limits. The same model: your access depends on someone else’s licence.
A non-custodial app like Dexly
Trade the Hyperliquid exchange from your own wallet — no KYC, no account, so there is nothing to suspend and no company that can be licensed out of your region.
Where Dexly fits
This is exactly the gap Dexly fills. Dexly is a non-custodial front-end to the Hyperliquid exchange: you connect your own wallet and trade 300+ perpetual markets with no KYC and no sign-up form. Because Dexly never holds your funds and there is no account to register, a MiCA deadline has nothing to act on — when an unlicensed exchange like MEXC loses the right to serve EEA users on July 1, a trader on Dexly simply keeps trading. Fund it with on-chain USDC, on web or the mobile app.
To understand why self-custody removes the lockout risk entirely, see What Is Non-Custodial Trading, or the full roundup of which exchanges are leaving the EU. And for the regulated route, our breakdown of Binance’s EU exit shows how the same MiCA deadline is reshaping the whole custodial market.
The Takeaway
MEXC did not secure a MiCA licence, so it cannot legally serve the EEA after July 1, 2026 — and for EU residents that lands as a loss of access. It is a cleaner illustration than most of the same lesson MiCA is teaching across the bloc: a custodial exchange is only as available as its licences allow, and when a deadline arrives, an unlicensed venue simply has to go.
The model immune to a deadline
The one model a MiCA deadline cannot reshape is self-custody. That is the whole point of Dexly — keep trading Hyperliquid from your own wallet, with no KYC and no account to suspend. Open it on web or the mobile app and you are trading in minutes — nothing to be licensed out of on July 1.
Educational content only — not investment or legal advice. Regulatory status changes quickly; confirm the current availability in your jurisdiction. Facts verified 2026-06-30.
Keep Learning
Risk Warning: Trading perpetual futures involves significant risk of loss. Only trade with capital you can afford to lose. Dexly is a non-custodial interface; you are responsible for your own funds and trading decisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Trade non-custodial on Dexly
Perps, spot, copy & prediction markets in one fast, non-custodial app. Get Dexly on iOS & Android and start in seconds.