Key Takeaways
- Bitpay won MiCA approval on July 16, opening regulated payment services across the EU.
- AFM authorization supports stablecoin and cross-border commerce in 27 EU countries.
- Bitpay plans further European investment after 15 years in cryptocurrency payments.
The Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets authorized Bitpay B.V. as a crypto-asset service provider, or CASP, the company announced Thursday. The approval covers regulated cryptocurrency payment services, including payment processing, cross-border transfers, consumer spending, and partner-supported buying, selling, and swapping.
One License, Wider EU Reach
The authorization allows Bitpay to operate through MiCA’s unified regulatory framework rather than navigating separate national systems for each European market. The company said merchants and partners can use the platform for cryptocurrency acceptance, stablecoin-denominated payments, and cross-border payment applications across the EU.
For consumers, the license could broaden access to tools for spending and managing digital assets. Bitpay said customers may also buy, sell, and swap crypto through supported partners, depending on the services available in their market.
“Receiving a MiCA authorisation from the AFM is an important milestone for Bitpay and strengthens our ability to serve businesses and consumers with regulated digital asset services across the EU,” said Thom de Jong, Bitpay’s chief compliance officer for Europe.
De Jong said MiCA provides a common framework for responsible cryptocurrency innovation and described the approval as validation of Bitpay’s compliance-focused strategy. The authorization places regulatory oversight at the center of the company’s European expansion as payment providers face greater demands for licensing, consumer safeguards, and operational accountability.
Stablecoins and Cross-Border Commerce
The approval is particularly relevant to merchants and payment partners exploring stablecoin settlement and international transactions. Stablecoins can move across blockchain networks without relying on traditional banking hours, although businesses still need regulated service providers to handle compliance, conversion, and payment processing.
A unified authorization may also reduce some of the regulatory fragmentation confronting companies that want to offer digital asset services in several EU countries. Bitpay can now build its regional payment operations around one regulatory structure while working with merchants, partners, and consumers across multiple markets.
The license does not eliminate the commercial, technical, or price risks associated with digital assets. However, it gives businesses access to a regulated provider operating under the EU’s regionwide crypto rules, a distinction that may influence whether companies can incorporate cryptocurrency payments into existing compliance and treasury policies.
“Europe is one of the most important regions for the future of payments,” said Jonathan Arler, Bitpay’s head of Europe. “From Amsterdam, Bitpay is now positioned to support merchants, partners, and consumers as demand grows for practical ways to accept, move, manage, and spend digital assets.”
Building on a 15-Year Payment Record
Founded in 2011, Bitpay has operated through several phases of cryptocurrency adoption, from early merchant experiments to broader interest in stablecoins, consumer payments and blockchain-based transfers. The MiCA authorization adds to a regulatory footprint that includes money transmitter licenses and other approvals in multiple jurisdictions.
The company explained that the European license will support its next stage of growth as digital assets become more integrated into commerce, consumer finance, and cross-border payments. The practical impact will depend on merchant adoption, partner availability and demand from consumers seeking alternatives to conventional payment systems.
Bitpay plans to continue investing in European operations, strategic partnerships and regulated payment infrastructure. Its next challenge will be converting the authorization into measurable adoption among merchants and consumers while meeting MiCA’s continuing compliance requirements.




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