EBA and the End of the PSD2 × MiCA Transition Window
Disclaimer: This material is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
In Europe, there is a rare type of regulatory news that seems “for lawyers”, but in reality changes how products behave: deposits/withdrawals, stablecoin transfers, cards, and pay functions inside crypto services. This is exactly that kind of story — the EBA’s 12 February 2026 position on what happens at the end of the transition period under its No-Action Letter at the intersection of PSD2 and MiCA, which expires on 2 March 2026.
What Is the PSD2 × MiCA Conflict and Why Did It Surface?
MiCA regulates the crypto market, including e-money tokens (EMTs) — stablecoins pegged to a single fiat currency. At the same time, PSD2 regulates payment services. Back in 2025, the EBA wrote that when a crypto service transfers EMTs on behalf of a client, this may fall under the definition of a payment service.
Put simply: MiCA answers the question “what type of crypto-asset is this and how should it be handled as a crypto-asset”, while PSD2 asks “is this effectively a payment service?” If the answer is yes, then a MiCA CASP licence alone may not be enough — a payment licence (or partnership with a licensed payment institution) may also be required.
What the EBA Said on 12 February 2026
The EBA issued an Opinion recommending how national competent authorities (NCAs) should act after 2 March 2026, when the No-Action Letter transition window ends. The key point: continuing without a PSD2 framework will not be possible for everyone — only those meeting certain conditions. Otherwise, the EBA advises requiring such services to stop.
The press wording explicitly states that NCAs may allow EMT activities that qualify as payment services to continue after 2 March 2026 under certain conditions. Those who do not meet the conditions may be required to cease such activities.
What This Means in Practice for Providers and Users
1) Stablecoins in the EU Are Divided by Use Case
If a product uses EMTs as a payment rail (transfers, settlements, internal pay functions), it risks falling into the PSD2 category. This may not affect the ability to hold USDC, but rather which functions a service can legally provide and in what format.
2) Providers Face a “Licence / Partner / Stop Functions” Choice
Market discussions currently revolve around three basic scenarios after 2 March:
- The service already holds a PSD2 licence or works with a licensed payment partner → continues operating.
- The service has applied and is in process → conditional or national transitional arrangements may apply.
- The service has not applied or does not qualify → EMT-related payment functions are expected to stop.
3) Visible Changes: Cards, Transfers, Payouts
For users, this may look like:
- changes in the availability of send/pay stablecoin functions;
- new limits or directional restrictions;
- tighter KYC/AML specifically for payment use cases;
- temporary pauses or migrations at certain providers.
What EU Users Should Do
1) Identify Which of Your Operations Are Actually “Payment Services”
If you use stablecoins for peer-to-peer transfers within a service, payments/cards, regular payouts/settlements, those scenarios may be affected first.
2) Read Communications and Updated Terms From Your Provider
After such deadlines, responsible providers typically publish:
- licensing/partner notifications,
- updated Terms,
- new limits or procedures.
If a service remains silent, that is also information.
3) Have a “Quick Switch” Plan
Check in advance:
- which networks/addresses you use for stablecoins,
- whether you have a backup withdrawal route,
- fees and processing times.
4) Do Not Confuse “Stablecoin Ban” With “Function Restriction”
Most panic comes from misinterpretation. The issue is often not whether you can hold the asset, but whether certain functions are reclassified as payment services and require the proper regulatory framework.
Conclusion
The 2 March 2026 deadline does not mark the end of stablecoins in the EU. It marks the end of the transition window concerning when EMT operations may be considered payment services. The EBA’s 12 February 2026 Opinion gives national regulators a clear fork in the road: allow continuation under conditions or require the suspension of functions that do not fit within the PSD2 framework.
If you are in the EU, the best approach is not panic, but three practical steps: understand which of your use cases qualify as payment services, review provider communications, and prepare backup deposit/withdrawal routes in advance.
