MiCA Compliance Guide for Crypto Startups (2026)
MiCA — the EU Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation — is now fully in force, and 2026 is the first year crypto startups are operating under steady-state supervision rather than a transitional regime. This guide explains what that means in practice for product, engineering, and founders.
What MiCA actually covers
MiCA regulates the issuance of crypto-assets and the activities of Crypto-Asset Service Providers (CASPs) inside the EU and EEA. It separates assets into three groups — asset-referenced tokens (ARTs), e-money tokens (EMTs), and other crypto-assets — and applies different obligations to each.
The three CASP licence categories
CASPs fall into three classes based on the services they offer. Class 1 (custody, transfers, advice) carries the lowest minimum capital, Class 2 (trading, exchange, placement) sits in the middle, and Class 3 (operating a trading platform) requires the highest capital and the most demanding governance. Picking the wrong class at incorporation can force an expensive re-licensing later.
Capital, governance, and prudential rules
Beyond minimum capital (€50k / €125k / €150k by class), MiCA requires fit-and-proper management, segregation of client assets, ICT and cybersecurity controls under DORA, and a written conflict-of-interest policy. EMT and ART issuers face additional reserve and redemption rules.
What MiCA changes inside your product
Listings need a published white paper or proof of exemption. Marketing communications must be fair, clear, and not misleading — and aligned with the white paper. Onboarding flows must capture suitability data for advice; custody flows must prove segregation; and complaint flows must be SLA-bound and auditable.
Cross-border passporting
A licence in any EU/EEA member state is passportable across the bloc, but home-state supervisors vary in speed and rigour. Founders frequently shortlist Ireland, Germany (BaFin), France (AMF), Lithuania, and Malta — each with very different timelines and costs.
Common product-side mistakes
The most expensive mistakes we see are: scoping a Class 1 licence when the roadmap clearly needs Class 3; treating the white paper as marketing copy rather than a binding disclosure; and bolting compliance onto a finished product instead of designing it in. Each of these typically costs 3–6 months and a re-architecture cycle.
How Hoboscon helps
We map MiCA articles to concrete engineering decisions — wallet segregation models, listing approval workflows, white paper publication pipelines, transaction monitoring, and DORA-compliant ICT controls. We deliver architecture and runbooks your supervisor can actually inspect.
Next step
If your business is preparing a CASP application or upgrading an existing licence, our team can design and build MiCA-aligned exchange, wallet, and stablecoin infrastructure.