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Revolut Says USDT Delisting Will Not Affect All Global…

Why Is Revolut Removing USDT in Europe?

Revolut will discontinue support for Tether’s USDT stablecoin for customers in the European Economic Area and Switzerland, while keeping support available in other markets. The digital banking platform said the decision followed a review of its crypto offering and risk considerations under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation. The move makes Revolut the latest major platform to adjust its stablecoin lineup in Europe as MiCA reshapes which tokens can remain available to retail users. “Revolut is discontinuing support for USDT for customers in the EEA following a periodic review of our cryptocurrency offering in light of the evolving EU regulatory framework under MiCA,” a company spokesperson said. The decision is not a global removal of USDT from Revolut. Customers outside the affected markets will continue to have access to the stablecoin, according to the company. That distinction matters because USDT remains the largest stablecoin in the crypto market and continues to play a central role in global trading liquidity, dollar access, and cross-border settlement.

What Does The Delisting Say About MiCA Compliance?

Revolut’s decision reflects the widening effect of MiCA on stablecoin availability in Europe. The regulation has created a clearer licensing framework for crypto-asset service providers and stablecoin issuers, but it has also forced platforms to make product-level decisions around tokens that do not fit neatly into the new regime. Tether, issuer of the $184 billion USDT stablecoin, has chosen not to seek authorization under the bloc’s MiCA framework. That has left European platforms facing a practical compliance question: whether to continue offering the dominant dollar stablecoin while regulatory expectations tighten, or remove it from local offerings and reduce legal exposure. Revolut’s process began before the latest notification to users. The company had already removed USDT from its Revolut X trading platform for EEA customers. The latest step completes the removal of USDT from its EEA retail offering, according to the spokesperson. The timeline gives affected users a transition period, with notifications indicating that the delisting is planned by Aug. 31, 2026. For platforms operating across Europe, that kind of phased removal reduces operational pressure and gives customers time to adjust balances, switch stablecoins, or move assets elsewhere.

Investor Takeaway

Revolut’s USDT delisting is a compliance-driven market shift, not a retreat from crypto globally. The key issue is that MiCA is forcing platforms to choose between stablecoin liquidity and regulatory certainty in Europe.

Why Does Switzerland Raise A Regulatory Question?

The inclusion of Switzerland adds a notable complication. MiCA is an EU regulation marked as having EEA relevance, meaning it is expected to apply across the broader European Economic Area, including Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein alongside EU member states. Switzerland is not part of the EU or the EEA and is not directly covered by MiCA. Revolut included Swiss customers among those affected but did not explain why Switzerland was part of the delisting scope. That may reflect Revolut’s internal risk controls rather than a direct legal requirement. Large platforms often align product restrictions across nearby markets when compliance teams view a token, service, or customer segment as carrying similar regulatory or operational risk. In this case, Revolut may be applying a broader European policy even where MiCA does not directly apply. The lack of a full jurisdiction list also leaves uncertainty around Revolut’s crypto footprint. The company did not provide a list of markets where it currently offers crypto services, making it harder to assess how much of its user base will be affected by the USDT removal.

What Are The Market Implications For Stablecoins?

The immediate impact falls on European Revolut customers who use USDT for crypto trading, dollar-denominated balances, or transfers between platforms. Those users will need to adjust before the removal takes effect, likely by converting to another supported stablecoin, moving assets off-platform, or reducing stablecoin exposure inside Revolut. For Tether, the delisting is another sign that European distribution is becoming harder under MiCA. USDT remains dominant globally, but Europe is increasingly becoming a regulated stablecoin market where authorization status can determine access to major consumer platforms. For rival stablecoin issuers, the trend creates an opening. MiCA-compliant or locally authorized stablecoins may gain share on platforms that need clear regulatory standing. That could gradually split stablecoin liquidity between global markets, where USDT remains central, and European platforms, where compliance-approved alternatives may become more prominent. For Revolut, the move shows how crypto-friendly fintechs are adapting to a more formal regulatory environment. The company launched crypto trading in 2017 and expanded crypto services in EEA countries in 2024, but its latest decision shows that growth in regulated markets now depends as much on token eligibility as on customer demand. The broader message is that MiCA is moving from legal framework to market structure. Stablecoins that do not meet authorization expectations may remain liquid globally, but their access to European retail platforms is narrowing.