The United Kingdom is moving toward a more formal regulatory framework for crypto assets, with the country’s financial watchdog providing a clearer timeframe for firms to seek fresh authorization or face restrictions on their operations.
On Thursday, the Financial Conduct Authority published a notice saying that it expects to open a formal gateway for crypto asset firms to apply for authorization in September 2026, ahead of a new regulatory regime expected to take effect in October 2027.
The process will require crypto companies operating in or marketing to the UK to secure approval or a variation of existing permission under the Financial Services and Markets Act.
Crucially, the FCA said existing registrations under the UK’s anti-money laundering, payments, or e-money regimes will not automatically carry over, requiring firms to reapply for permission to conduct regulated crypto activities before the new regime begins.
Companies that apply during the formal application window but are still awaiting a decision when the rules take effect will be allowed to continue operating temporarily.
However, firms that miss the window or fail to secure approval will enter a transitional provision, allowing them to service existing customers but barring new regulated crypto offerings. If authorization is ultimately refused, affected firms would be required to “exit the UK market in an orderly manner,” the regulator said.
The FCA said the gateway will be accompanied by saving and transitional provisions aimed at avoiding disruption, while confirming that crypto firms will no longer be able to rely on third-party approvers.
The update provides additional clarity regarding the UK government’s plan to regulate crypto assets as financial products by 2027, with the FCA previously signaling it will prioritize areas such as stablecoin payments and market integrity under the new framework.
While UK policymakers argue the regime will provide clear rules and legitimacy for the industry, critics have warned that tighter rules and higher compliance costs could make the country a less attractive base for crypto firms, particularly amid ongoing uncertainty around taxation and regulation.
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