Binance’s regulatory headaches in Europe haven’t changed its appetite for the continent. Co-CEO Yi He told the audience at an event in Brussels that Europe is an important market for the exchange and that Binance intends to keep working with national and EU-level authorities, according to the original report . Building trust takes time, she added, and Binance is in a direct dialogue with regulators to advance its compliance profile. The comments come as the company navigates a patchwork of registration requirements, with the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework nearing full application.
Yi’s statement arrives after a period of retreat. Binance has pulled back from multiple European jurisdictions, including the Netherlands and Germany, over licensing roadblocks. It also exited Austria and halted derivatives in several markets. Despite that, Yi made clear the firm considers Europe a long-term terrain. “Europe remains an important market for Binance,” she said, pointing to ongoing cooperation with regulators. For a platform that once operated with a jurisdictional-by-jurisdictional whac-a-mole strategy, the language signals a deeper structural shift.
Europe Remains Central to Binance’s Strategy
MiCA, which introduces a single licensing regime across the 27-nation bloc, offers exchanges a clear path if they can meet the standards. Full implementation is expected in early 2025, but several EU member states have already begun transposing the rules into national law. Binance has not publicly confirmed where it will apply for a MiCA license, though France, Italy, and Lithuania are seen as likely hubs given the exchange’s existing registrations. The next few months will test whether Binance can convert its compliance investments into a stable European passport.
Other large exchanges have also been maneuvering. Coinbase chose Ireland as its MiCA base, while Kraken secured a license in Ireland and Bybit in Cyprus. The race for regulatory clarity is turning into a market share contest. For Binance, failure to lock in a license could mean losing ground to smaller, locally compliant operators that are already growing retail share. Yet Yi’s tone suggested confidence. She told the audience that crypto service providers, including Binance, are expected to become more important gatekeepers of the financial system than traditional institutions.
That argument is rooted in the technology’s ability to embed compliance directly into asset flows. On-chain monitoring, real-time transaction tracing, and programmatic risk controls are increasingly seen by regulators as tools that make digital asset platforms safer than analogue banking rails. Binance has invested heavily in compliance headcount and infrastructure over the past 18 months, hiring former regulators and law enforcement experts. The message is clear: the firm wants to be part of the regulatory infrastructure, not outside it.
The Gatekeeper Argument
Yi’s gatekeeper claim is not just rhetoric. It aligns with a broader shift in how policymakers view exchanges. As stablecoins and tokenized securities move across blockchains, the platform that onboards users and manages custody effectively controls access to the system. In that scenario, a handful of large exchanges could replace banks as the primary choke points for anti-money laundering and sanctions enforcement. European regulators are already drafting rules that put the same obligations on crypto asset service providers (CASPs) as on banks under the EU’s Anti-Money Laundering Regulation (AMLR), which will apply from mid-2026.
If Binance can demonstrate full compliance across tax reporting, suspicious transaction monitoring, and sanctions screening, it may position itself as a gatekeeper that regulators can trust rather than target. The view that crypto firms will overtake banks is echoed in the tokenization sector, where real-world assets on-chain have already crossed $20 billion . That trend pushes traditional finance toward the same infrastructure Binance is betting on.
Still, the gatekeeper role cuts both ways. European regulators have made it clear that systemic platforms will face higher capital buffers, stricter governance, and direct oversight. If Binance becomes a financial gatekeeper, it will also inherit the liabilities that come with it. For users, this could mean fewer anonymous services, mandatory KYC reinforcement, and tighter restrictions on high-risk products. Privacy coins and self-custodial wallets may come under additional pressure if exchanges are forced to act as the primary surveillance layer.
Regulatory Clarity Still Months Away
Europe’s regulatory timeline remains uncertain in detail. While MiCA provides a framework, the actual licensing process depends on national competent authorities, which vary in speed and rigor. Binance could face delays if local regulators take a cautious posture, especially given the exchange’s prior run-ins with French authorities and the Dutch central bank. The next six to nine months will reveal whether the commitment Yi emphasized translates into concrete approvals.
Across the Atlantic, a similar push for oversight is encountering resistance, as banking lobbies try to water down landmark crypto legislation just days before a Senate vote. That divergence might influence the speed at which European rules are enforced. If the US softens its stance, European authorities could tighten to maintain a competitive regulatory edge. Or they could ease to avoid capital flight. The outcome will shape the pace of MiCA’s implementation.
For Binance, the immediate focus is credibility. Every registration or license rejection carries reputational weight that affects partnerships with banks, stablecoin issuers, and institutional clients. Despite regulatory headwinds, BNB Chain continues to rank among the top networks by developer activity , giving the ecosystem some operational resilience. But network usage alone does not guarantee regulatory acceptance. Yi’s appearance in Brussels was a clear step in the direction of engagement, not retreat. The question now is whether European supervisors agree that Binance can be the gatekeeper it claims to become.