
Revolut has announced the delisting of USDT for its European customers to ensure compliance with the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation. Users were permitted to purchase USDT until July 6, with a final deadline of August 31 to trade or transfer holdings to external wallets. Any remaining balances after this date will be automatically converted into the user's home currency. This move by the $75 billion valuation fintech firm, which serves over 75 million customers, highlights the growing regulatory pressure on stablecoin issuers that fail to meet MiCA's strict licensing and reserve requirements. Tether, the issuer of USDT, has struggled to align its operational model with these new EU standards, leading to restricted access across various regional platforms. Simultaneously, Tether’s recent suspension of 131 TRON wallets following OFAC sanctions underscores the broader trend of increased oversight in the digital asset space. These developments signal a significant shift in the RWA market, where regulatory compliance is becoming the primary determinant for stablecoin accessibility and institutional adoption. As major financial service providers prioritize legal certainty, the landscape for non-compliant assets in the EU is rapidly narrowing.
Revolut is a global fintech company offering banking services, currency exchange, and cryptocurrency trading to over 75 million users. MiCA is the European Union's comprehensive regulatory framework designed to provide legal certainty for crypto-assets, mandating strict reserve, disclosure, and licensing requirements for stablecoin issuers operating within the bloc.