Why Is Revolut Removing USDT?
Revolut has notified some users that it will delist Tether’s USDt stablecoin in August, citing regulatory and risk considerations as major fintech platforms continue adjusting crypto access under tighter stablecoin rules. According to a customer notice, users will no longer be able to buy USDT from July 6, with full delisting scheduled for Aug. 31, 2026. USDT deposits will stop being supported after July 30, 2026, and any incoming USDT transfers after that date will be rejected. Users who still hold USDT at the end of August will have their balances automatically converted into their base currency at the day’s exchange rate. That structure gives customers a withdrawal or sale window, but it also makes clear that Revolut does not intend to support residual USDT balances after the cutoff. The company did not identify a specific regulatory framework behind the decision. It cited “regulatory and risk considerations” without saying whether the delisting applies globally or only in certain jurisdictions.How Does MiCA Shape The Stablecoin Market?
The timing places Revolut’s move inside a broader European shift after the rollout of the Markets in Crypto-Assets framework. Several crypto platforms began removing USDT from European offerings in 2024 as MiCA stablecoin requirements changed the operating environment for issuers and crypto asset service providers. Revolut received a MiCA license as a crypto asset service provider in November 2025, with authorization issued by the Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission, according to the European Securities and Markets Authority register. That status increases the importance of aligning its crypto product list with European regulatory expectations. The central issue is Tether’s decision not to comply with MiCA. USDT remains the largest stablecoin in global crypto trading, but European service providers face a different calculation: whether continuing to support the token creates regulatory, operational, or customer-risk exposure under the new framework. For platforms such as Revolut, stablecoin access is no longer only a product decision. It is part of licensing, compliance, reserve transparency, and customer protection controls. Removing USDT may reduce legal risk, but it can also affect user choice, liquidity, and the range of dollar-linked instruments available inside the app.Investor Takeaway
Revolut’s USDT delisting shows how MiCA is reshaping stablecoin distribution even without a direct ban on the token. The pressure is moving through licensed platforms, which must decide whether supporting non-compliant stablecoins is worth the regulatory risk.
