MiCA: what it actually means
MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets) is the EU regulatory framework that establishes uniform rules for the issuance of and the provision of services with crypto-assets. Its core goals are investor protection, financial stability and legal certainty in a previously decentralised, unsupervised market. It went fully live in December 2024 and is enforced from 2025 onward. 'The importance of decentralisation under regulatory pressure' explains what this means for YOUR wallet and YOUR exchange.
Global regulators you need to know
The global crypto regulatory map in 2026 has several powerful players besides MiCA. In the US: the SEC (securities-style enforcement) and the CFTC (commodities, derivatives) split jurisdiction. In the UK: the FCA enforces marketing rules + a financial-promotions regime. In Singapore: the MAS issues DPT licences. In Switzerland: FINMA has a mature crypto-asset framework. In Japan: the FSA recognises licensed exchanges. Knowing which regulator covers your activity is the difference between operating legally and accidentally breaking the law.
The Travel Rule explained
FATF Recommendation 16 (the Travel Rule) requires that for any transfer above ~$1,000 between regulated VASPs, originator + beneficiary identity travels with the transaction. MiCA implements this in the EU; FinCEN's rule covers it in the US; MAS Notice PSN02 in Singapore. Self-custody transfers between your OWN wallets are NOT covered — yet.
How to stay compliant without losing privacy
Three practical principles: (1) KYC only with exchanges you actually need for fiat on/off ramps, (2) keep long-term holdings on a hardware wallet you control, (3) use only legal jurisdictions for your activity. The MiCA / SEC / FCA / MAS overlap matters: pick exchanges licensed in YOUR residency country, not just any reputable one.
Red flags on an exchange
Signs your exchange could become a problem: (a) no MiCA licence (or equivalent SEC/MAS/FCA registration) visible on their footer, (b) headquartered in a non-cooperative jurisdiction with no local subsidiary, (c) refuses to publish proof-of-reserves, (d) opaque corporate ownership. We give a 5-minute checklist.
Inheritance + frozen accounts
Two scenarios most users never plan for: dying without crypto inheritance documentation, and having an exchange account frozen on day 1. We cover multi-sig wallets with a legal executor, time-locked transfers, the exact email template to send a regulator when an account is frozen, and the documents to attach for each major jurisdiction.