Stablecoin Regulation
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Start hereStablecoin regulation explained: MiCA categories and DAC8 reporting in the EU
EU stablecoin rules are a two-layer stack: MiCA classifies tokens and actors, while DAC8 turns activity into standardized tax-reporting data from 2026.
Learn about Stablecoin Regulation

Why is USDT restricted in the EU under MiCA
EU-licensed exchanges geofence or delist USDT because MiCA treats it as an e-money token that needs an authorized EU issuer.

GENIUS Act vs MiCA: The stablecoin regulation differences that shape liquidity
Both regimes treat fiat-backed stablecoins like regulated payment instruments, but issuer eligibility, reserve protections, and freeze controls drive market access.

How MiCA regulates stablecoins: ART vs EMT rules and the EU exchange choke point
MiCA’s stablecoin regime started on 30 June 2024 and pushes compliance through issuer licensing plus CASP listing enforcement by Q1 2025.

Are stablecoins legal? What the rules actually hinge on
Stablecoins are generally permitted, but the legal exposure often turns on jurisdiction and whether you can redeem with the issuer or only through an intermediary.

What is the GENIUS Act? The U.S. rulebook for payment stablecoins
Signed July 18, 2025, the law forces 1:1 cash-like backing, monthly attestations, and a yield ban for USD payment stablecoins.