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Coinbase opens Luxembourg MiCA hub as EU deadline nears
coinbase-opens-luxembourg-mica-hub-as-eu-deadline-nears
Coinbase opens Luxembourg MiCA hub as EU deadline nears
Coinbase’s Luxembourg hub now gives it a single MiCA route to serve users across Europe.Ripple’s recent CASP approval now keeps Luxembourg central to regulated crypto payments growth in Europe.Binance’s Greece setback shows MiCA access may split licensed exchanges from slower rivals across Europe.
2026-06-25 Source:crypto.news

Coinbase has established Luxembourg as its European crypto hub under the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets framework, one year after securing a license from the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier. 

Summary
  • Coinbase’s Luxembourg hub now gives it a single MiCA route to serve users across Europe.
  • Ripple’s recent CASP approval now keeps Luxembourg central to regulated crypto payments growth in Europe.
  • Binance’s Greece setback shows MiCA access may split licensed exchanges from slower rivals across Europe.

The company used its latest office opening to confirm Luxembourg as its MiCA home for all 27 EU member states. The setup allows Coinbase Luxembourg S.A. to offer crypto-asset services across the EEA through passporting.

“Luxembourg is officially our MiCA home,” Coinbase said on X. 

The exchange said it plans to welcome users from across the EU under one licensing base. It has also pointed to Luxembourg’s financial sector, blockchain laws, and clear oversight as reasons for the move.

MiCA passport widens market access

Coinbase secured its MiCA license from the CSSF in June 2025. As crypto.news reported, the license lets the exchange expand services to customers across all 27 EU member states. Coinbase had earlier built local license coverage in Germany, France, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain.

Under MiCA, crypto firms can use one national authorization to serve users across the bloc after completing required notifications. That setup gives large firms a clearer path than separate local approvals. It also places more pressure on exchanges that still lack approval before the July 1 transition deadline.

Ripple adds Luxembourg momentum

The Coinbase update came after Ripple received preliminary CASP approval from Luxembourg’s CSSF. As crypto.news reported, the approval came through a “Green Light Letter” and remains subject to final conditions. Ripple said the license would support regulated cryptoasset and stablecoin payment services for banks, fintechs, and businesses across the EEA.

Ripple’s move gives Luxembourg another major U.S.-linked crypto firm seeking access through its regulator. The firm also holds an EMI license in Europe and has framed its CASP plan as part of its payments and RLUSD stablecoin strategy. The timing places Luxembourg at the center of regulated crypto payments, tokenization, and exchange services.

Europe deadline raises pressure

The broader market faces a tighter MiCA clock. As crypto.news reported, OpenPayd secured MiCA authorization days before the July 1 deadline, covering stablecoin conversions, custody, wallet infrastructure, and transfers. France has also warned unlicensed crypto firms to secure approval or wind down.

Binance faces more uncertainty. In a previous article, crypto.news discussed Reuters’ report that Binance’s Greek MiCA application was expected to be rejected, putting its EU service access at risk. Binance said at the time it had worked with regulators and had no formal indication of a denial.

Coinbase’s position is clearer because its Luxembourg entity already holds authorization. “Luxembourg has established itself as the EU’s leading hub for institutional crypto and tokenization,” said Coinbase chief policy officer Faryar Shirzad. He said the country had taken a thoughtful, innovation-oriented approach to blockchain and digital assets.

The next phase will test how licensed firms use MiCA in practice. Coinbase can now compete for EU users through one regulatory base, while Ripple awaits final conditions and other firms race to complete approvals. The licensing gap may shape which platforms keep broad European access after the transition period ends.