Crypto exchange Kraken has secured a Markets in Crypto‑Assets licence from the Central Bank of Ireland, granting it regulated crypto services access across all 30 member states of the European Economic Area. This licence builds on its existing authorisations: an electronic money institution licence obtained in 2023 and a Markets in Financial Instruments Directive authorisation achieved in February 2025.
The MiCA framework, effective since late 2024, aims to harmonise digital asset regulation across the EU. Kraken’s approval via Ireland enables it to “passport” services continental‑wide—streamlining compliance with unified standards on consumer protection, transparency and oversight.
Co‑CEO Arjun Sethi described the licence as a “powerful signal” of Kraken’s dedication to “responsible innovation” and noted the company’s multi‑year work to meet the Central Bank of Ireland’s rigorous regulatory bar.
Since launching its BTC/EUR pair in 2013, Kraken has built extensive euro‑denominated liquidity and registered as a Virtual Asset Service Provider across key European jurisdictions: Ireland, Belgium, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland and Spain. The platform now reports euro trades account for approximately 17.5 per cent of its spot‑crypto volume.
Kraken joins a cohort of major exchanges – Coinbase, OKX, Crypto.com, Bybit and Bitstamp – that have pursued MiCA licences, emphasising the growing strategic importance of regulatory clarity. Meanwhile, stablecoin issuer Tether has declined to register its USDT product under MiCA, leading some exchanges to delist the asset.
The EU authorisation coincides with Kraken’s evolution in traditional finance. After securing the MiFID licence via a Cyprus‑based entity, it launched regulated crypto derivatives in February and acquired futures platform NinjaTrader earlier in 2025. Its 2023 EMI licence complements partnerships with Mastercard and embed‑as‑a‑service offerings like Kraken Embed through Dutch neobank bunq.
Kraken’s dual strategy spans jurisdictions: while embracing EU regulatory frameworks, the firm also relocated its global headquarters to Wyoming, citing the state’s crypto‑friendly stance. In the US, it recently avoided a legal challenge when the Securities and Exchange Commission dropped a 2023 lawsuit alleging operations as an unregistered exchange.
The MiCA authorisation equips Kraken to roll out regulated spot trading, derivatives and payments across Europe. That expansion responds to heightened demand among retail, institutional and professional users seeking compliance assurance. Kraken’s approach sets a template for crypto platforms navigating legal plurality ─ positioning Ireland not simply as a licensor but as a blueprint for public‑private collaboration in digital finance.
European policymakers have lauded MiCA’s entry, describing it as the most comprehensive global regulatory regime for digital assets. Kraken’s success demonstrates the potential of these structures to stabilise and mature the sector—but also signals a competitive divide between jurisdictions embracing innovation and those lagging.