BitGo is offering crypto firms a faster route to meet Europeβs MiCA requirements as the blocβs final compliance deadline approaches on July 1.
Key Takeaways
- BitGo is offering MiCA compliant infrastructure to crypto firms that have not yet secured authorization in Europe.
- The company says businesses can continue serving clients through its regulated platform while pursuing their own licenses.
- Industry estimates suggest that around 75% of pre MiCA registered crypto firms could lose their registration status as transition periods expire.
- BitGo believes its licensed infrastructure can help firms avoid disruptions as Europe moves to a unified regulatory framework.
What Happened?
With the European Union’s Markets in Crypto Assets Regulation entering its final phase, crypto companies are facing increasing pressure to secure authorization before the July 1 deadline. BitGo is positioning itself as a compliance partner for firms that are still awaiting approval or do not want to build their own regulated infrastructure.
The company says firms can integrate with BitGo Europeβs licensed platform and continue operating within a MiCA compliant framework while maintaining direct relationships with their customers.
After July 1, firms without authorization canβt keep serving EU clients. Users shouldnβt be left scrambling because a platform is still waiting on approval.
β Mike Belshe (@mikebelshe) June 16, 2026
BitGo Europe is already MiCA-licensed through BaFin and built to support regulated custody, transfer, staking, and trading⦠https://t.co/WljDU3tJP5
BitGo Sees Opportunity as MiCA Deadline Approaches
As the countdown to Europeβs MiCA compliance deadline enters its final weeks, BitGo is making a strong push to attract crypto firms that risk losing access to EU customers.
BitGo chief executive Mike Belshe recently encouraged firms awaiting regulatory approval to use the company’s German licensed infrastructure rather than face potential disruptions once the transition period expires.
In a post on X, Belshe warned that firms without authorization will not be able to continue serving EU clients after July 1. He argued that users should not be left searching for alternatives simply because a platform remains stuck in the licensing process.
The deadline marks the end of the transition period that allowed many crypto businesses to operate under existing national registration frameworks. Once the grace period ends, firms must hold a MiCA authorization to provide services across the European Union.
How BitGo’s Compliance Model Works?
According to BitGo, companies that already conduct the necessary know your customer checks can onboard clients into MiCA compliant sub accounts through BitGo’s infrastructure.
Belshe explained that firms can continue managing customer support, products, and client relationships while relying on BitGo for regulated custody and storage services. Belshe said:
The company also said eligible firms can continue pursuing their own Crypto Asset Service Provider licenses while simultaneously using BitGo Europeβs infrastructure.
BitGo Expands Its European Footprint
BitGo Europe GmbH received its MiCA license from Germany’s financial regulator BaFin on May 12, 2025. The authorization can be passported across the European Union and European Economic Area, giving the company access to 30 countries.
In March 2026, BitGo expanded its Crypto as a Service platform across all EEA markets. The platform offers services including custody, asset transfers, trading infrastructure, staking, and fiat payment integration through application programming interfaces designed for banks and fintech firms.
The company also provides custody insurance coverage of up to $250 million and has already onboarded firms such as 21bitcoin for regulated custody services in Europe.
Belshe summed up the company’s broader vision by stating:
βEurope needs crypto access on regulated rails. Thatβs what BitGo has been building.β
MiCA Could Reshape Europe’s Crypto Industry
The new regulatory framework is expected to significantly reduce the number of active crypto firms operating in Europe.
Industry estimates indicate there were more than 3,000 registered crypto firms across Europe in 2024, including over 1,400 registrations in Poland alone.
However, according to figures cited by law firm Hogan Lovells, only 194 authorized CASPs, including credit institutions, existed as of May 2026. The firm estimates that roughly 75% of businesses operating under pre-MiCA registrations may lose their status as national transition periods expire.
For many companies, building a fully compliant operational framework from the ground up involves substantial spending on legal expertise, governance systems, compliance processes, and technology infrastructure. BitGo is betting that renting regulated infrastructure will prove to be a more practical and cost effective solution.
CoinLaw’s Takeaway
In my experience, regulatory transitions often create winners and losers, and MiCA appears set to do exactly that. While many crypto firms have spent years operating under fragmented national rules, Europe is now moving toward a single framework that raises the compliance bar significantly. I found BitGo’s strategy particularly interesting because it transforms regulation from a challenge into a business opportunity. If a large portion of firms fail to secure authorization before the deadline, demand for ready made compliant infrastructure could increase rapidly, placing companies like BitGo in a strong position within Europe’s evolving crypto market.