---
title: "Europe Tightens Crypto Rules With New €10K Cash Ban"
date: 2026-06-19
author: "Kathleen Kinder"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/europe-tightens-crypto-rules-with-new-10k-cash-ban.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Compliance"
    url: "/compliance.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# Europe Tightens Crypto Rules With New €10K Cash Ban

The European Union is moving ahead with sweeping anti-money laundering rules that will introduce a €10,000 cash payment limit and stricter compliance requirements for cryptocurrency service providers starting in July 2027.

## Key Takeaways

- The EU will ban commercial cash payments above €10,000 from July 10, 2027.
- Crypto firms will face stricter customer verification requirements under new AML rules.
- Anonymous crypto accounts and services supporting transaction obfuscation will be prohibited on regulated platforms.
- Claims that every Bitcoin transaction will require identification are not accurate under the new regulation.

## What Happened?

The European Union has adopted a new anti-money laundering framework that introduces a bloc wide **€10,000 limit on commercial cash payments** beginning on July 10, 2027. The measure is part of **Regulation (EU) 2024/1624**, which aims to standardize anti-money laundering requirements across member states while giving individual countries the ability to enforce even stricter limits if they choose.

The regulation also brings significant changes for the cryptocurrency industry, including new customer due diligence requirements for [regulated crypto service providers](https://coinlaw.io/crypto-exchange-statistics/), restrictions on anonymous crypto services, and expanded reporting obligations for a wide range of sectors.

> NEW: The EU’s new AML regulation, taking effect July 2027, caps cash payments at €10,000, bans anonymous crypto accounts, and requires regulated providers to delist privacy coins. [pic.twitter.com/vkZffBgk3a](https://t.co/vkZffBgk3a)
> 
> — CoinDesk (@CoinDesk) [June 19, 2026](https://x.com/CoinDesk/status/2067974157820666063?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## EU Introduces Bloc Wide Cash Payment Cap

Under the new rules, businesses across the European Union will no longer be allowed to accept **cash payments exceeding €10,000** for goods and services. The regulation is designed to reduce the use of cash in large transactions that authorities believe could be linked to [money laundering](https://coinlaw.io/money-laundering-statistics/) and other illicit financial activities.

The new cap applies to commercial transactions but does not affect legitimate private exchanges between individuals. Deposits and payments made through banks, payment institutions, and electronic money issuers are also excluded from the limit, although those transactions remain subject to existing monitoring requirements.

In addition, any cash transaction valued at **€3,000 or more** will require traders and service providers covered by the rules to conduct customer due diligence and verify the identity of buyers.

## New Compliance Requirements for Crypto Firms

The regulation introduces tougher requirements for **Crypto Asset Service Providers (CASPs)**, including exchanges, custodians, and other regulated crypto businesses.

Under the new framework:

- **Full customer due diligence will be required for occasional crypto transactions worth €1,000 or more.**
- **Customer identification requirements will also apply to transactions below €1,000, although full verification procedures may not be necessary.**
- **Ongoing monitoring will be required for established customer relationships.**
- **Anonymous crypto accounts will be prohibited.**

The rules also target services that facilitate transaction anonymization. Regulated providers will be unable to offer accounts or services designed to obscure transaction activity, including support for privacy focused coins on regulated platforms.

However, the regulation does not ban individuals from owning privacy focused crypto assets for personal use.

## Does the EU Require ID for Every Bitcoin Transaction?

One of the most widely circulated claims surrounding the new regulation is that the European Union will require identification for every **Bitcoin transaction beginning in 2027**.

A closer look at the regulation shows that this claim is misleading.

The rules apply primarily to regulated crypto service providers operating under the EU’s crypto framework. Users establishing relationships with exchanges and other regulated providers will be subject to [Know Your Customer requirements](https://coinlaw.io/kyc-compliance-in-crypto-statistics/) and transaction monitoring.

However, **peer to peer transfers between self hosted wallets are not covered by these identification requirements**. Direct Bitcoin transactions between private wallets do not automatically trigger customer verification obligations under the regulation.

The **EU’s separate Travel Rule framework** does require regulated providers to transmit sender and recipient information when facilitating crypto transfers, particularly for transactions involving self hosted wallets that meet specific thresholds. Even so, this does not amount to identification requirements for every [Bitcoin transaction](https://coinlaw.io/bitcoin-statistics/).

## AML Rules Expand Beyond Finance

The updated framework significantly broadens the list of sectors that must comply with anti money laundering requirements.

New obligated entities include:

- **Professional football clubs and agents**.
- **Crowdfunding platforms**.
- **Investment migration operators**.
- **Luxury goods dealers**.
- **High value vehicle, boat, and aircraft sellers**.

These businesses will face enhanced reporting obligations and may be required to report suspicious or high value transactions to relevant authorities.

The regulation also strengthens **beneficial ownership transparency** rules. Legal entities operating within the EU must disclose and register their ultimate beneficial owners, with ownership thresholds generally set at 25%. Higher risk structures could face lower reporting thresholds.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

In my experience, the biggest story here is not the **€10,000 cash limit** itself but the continued push toward greater transparency across both traditional finance and crypto. Many headlines suggest Europe is about to require identification for every Bitcoin transaction, but the actual regulation is more nuanced.

I found that the rules focus heavily on regulated intermediaries rather than direct wallet to wallet activity. At the same time, the direction of travel is clear: European regulators want more visibility into financial transactions, whether those transactions involve cash, crypto, luxury assets, or corporate ownership structures.