Tether to end support for EURT stablecoin citing MiCA regulations, falling demand
Quick Take
- Tether is discontinuing support for EURT, requesting customers holding the Euro stablecoin on all supported blockchains to redeem by Nov. 27, 2025.
- The decision comes shortly before the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation, known as MiCA, takes full effect at the end of December.
Tether is set to discontinue support for its Euro stablecoin EURT amid evolving regulations in the region and falling community interest.
In a statement on Wednesday, the stablecoin issuer urged customers holding EURT on all supported blockchains, including Ethereum, Solana and Tron, to redeem their assets by Nov. 27, 2025. New EURT issuance requests are no longer accepted, though the company confirmed that the last acquisition request was processed in 2022.
“This decision aligns with our broader strategic direction, considering the evolving regulatory frameworks surrounding stablecoins in the European market,” Tether stated. “Until a more risk-averse framework is in place—one that fosters innovation and offers the stability and protection our users deserve—we have chosen to prioritize other initiatives.”
The firm said it would shift its focus to support new ventures, such as Quantoz Payments’ MiCA-compliant stablecoins, EURQ and USDQ, powered by Tether’s real-world asset tokenization platform, Hadron.
The impact of the EU’s MiCA regulations
The EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation (MiCA), overseen by the European Securities and Markets Authority, was approved by the European Parliament in April 2023, mandating that stablecoins issued in the region must pass increased regulatory requirements.
MiCA’s implementation rolls out in different phases, with an initial deadline last June primarily for crypto asset service providers and other entities operating in the crypto space to comply with certain stipulations set out in the regulation, including registration and KYC/AML requirements.
Other provisions, including some that apply to stablecoins, are being phased in over time, with full compliance for the most stringent requirements, such as capital and reserve obligations, coming into force by the end of December.
Stablecoin issuers operating outside the EU but providing services to EU residents will also need to comply with MiCA regulations, potentially leading to significant changes in their operational and compliance strategies globally.
Tether’s stablecoin dominance
Tether’s EURT once dominated the Euro stablecoin market, accounting for a market cap of more than $500 million at one point. However, since the implementation of select provisions of the new regulations in June, MiCA-compliant stablecoins, such as Stasis’ EURS, Circle’s EURC and Société Générale’s EURCV, have overtaken it in market share, representing a supply of $133 million, $91 million and $41 million, respectively. EURT has fallen to a supply of $27 million, according to CoinGecko data.
Meanwhile, the full impact of the regulations on Tether’s USDT — the largest overall stablecoin on the market with a supply of nearly $133 billion — is less certain, with the issuer yet to receive a license for USDT under MiCA. Some crypto exchanges like OKX have already ceased support for USDT in the European Economic Area, while others such as Binance have previously said “unauthorized stablecoins” won’t be delisted on spot markets but availability would be limited to European users on certain products.
In June, Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino told The Block that the EU’s MiCA regulations “contain several problematic requirements” that “could not only render the job of a stablecoin issuer extremely complex but also make EU-licensed stablecoins extremely vulnerable and riskier to operate.”
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