Roughly 2 million French crypto users woke up this week to a Binance account that can do exactly one thing: withdraw.
If you're holding funds on Binance anywhere in the EU, this isn't just a France problem — it's a preview of what MiCA enforcement looks like in practice.
Here's what triggered the freeze, what are behind the scenes, and why some traders are moving their coins out faster than others.
Binance exchange stopped offering spot and margin trading in France and several other EU countries starting July 1, 2026, after it failed to secure a MiCA license before the bloc-wide transitional deadline.
MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets) requires any exchange serving EU customers to hold authorization from at least one member state. It had reportedly withdrawn its licensing application in Greece and had not secured approval elsewhere in time.
The restriction affects roughly 2 million users in France, as well as customers in countries including Italy, Poland, and Spain. Affected users can still withdraw their holdings, but can no longer place new spot or leveraged trades.
The exchange says customers that their funds remain safe and encourages them to move assets to a MiCA-licensed platform or into self-custody cold wallets.

Source: BFMbusiness X
This isn't a Binance-only story. Of roughly 5,000 crypto firms that previously served EU customers, only around 240 currently hold MiCA authorization — and in France, that number is just 24.
For active traders, the immediate impact is simple: no new positions, no leverage, and reduced flexibility to react to crypto market moves. For long-term holders, the bigger question is counterparty risk — how comfortable are you leaving assets on a platform that's currently locked out of full service in your country?
Effective date: July 1, 2026
Countries affected: France, Italy, Poland, Spain, and others
What still works: Withdrawals only
What's suspended: Spot and margin/leverage trading
Funds status: Assets remain secure
On-chain outflows: About $1.6 billion over the past month
Assets still on platform: Roughly $114 billion
Despite the outflow figure, industry voices note that withdrawal activity so far looks more like caution than a stampede. A compliance executive at Coinhouse, a MiCA-licensed French exchange, described the current outflows as measured rather than a mass exodus, contrasting the situation with the 2022 collapse of FTX, which he attributed to internal fraud and mismanagement rather than a regulatory gap.
Some longtime traders have already moved their crypto to MiCA-licensed platforms or personal wallets, citing a preference for control over their assets while trading is unavailable. Others are choosing to wait, betting Binance secures a license and restores full service.

Source: Wu Blockchain X
Whether Binance obtains a MiCA license through another EU member state
Whether withdrawal volumes accelerate or continue at a measured pace
Any formal guidance from national regulators on remaining users
Movement of users toward MiCA-licensed competitors like Coinhouse
Binance Europe trading halt is a direct result of missing the MiCA compliance deadline, not a sign of platform insolvency — but it leaves millions of user with reduced access and a decision to make. Whether Binance re-enters the market with a license, or users permanently shift to MiCA-approved alternatives will shape the EU crypto exchange landscape through the rest of 2026.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile and carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.