The approval, granted by the Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA), gives the Winklevoss-owned exchange a stronger foothold as it pushes deeper into the European market.
The license allows Gemini to expand its suite of crypto services to more than 30 countries across the EU, marking one of the company’s most significant milestones since its founding. The exchange described the approval as a “critical step” in ensuring European customers have access to secure, compliant crypto products.
This development comes just days after Gemini filed to list its Class A common stock on Nasdaq under the ticker GEMI, highlighting how the company is ramping up both its regulatory reach and public market ambitions.
Gemini emphasized that Europe’s MiCA framework is setting the standard for how crypto can be regulated without stifling innovation. “Transparent regulation is the foundation for mainstream adoption,” the exchange said, adding that MiCA proves Europe is ahead of many regions in providing clarity for digital assets.
The exchange already holds a MiFID II license, which it received in May, enabling it to offer crypto derivatives within the EU. Together with the new MiCA approval, Gemini now has a broad regulatory base to expand more aggressively across Europe.
Beyond regulatory wins, Gemini has been experimenting with new products. In June, the exchange launched tokenized stocks on Arbitrum, giving EU traders 24/7 access to blockchain-based versions of equities like MicroStrategy.
The move placed Gemini in direct competition with rivals such as Kraken, which rolled out a similar service on Solana, and Robinhood, which debuted an Arbitrum-based platform for European users on the same day. Under EU law, tokenized stocks fall under the MiFID II umbrella, making them subject to the same rules as traditional financial instruments.
Gemini is now the fifth exchange to win MiCA approval from Malta’s regulator, joining Bitpanda, Crypto.com, OKX, and ZBX. The MFSA faced scrutiny earlier this year after the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) flagged issues in its licensing process. However, the authority later confirmed that none of its MiCA approvals were under threat, signaling strong coordination with EU oversight bodies.
For Gemini, the new license not only secures its place in one of Europe’s most crypto-friendly jurisdictions but also positions the exchange to capitalize on the continent’s fast-evolving digital finance market.
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