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Crypto exchanges in the Baltics and Nordics - 31.05.2026
On Sunday, 31 days before the 1 July MiCA transition deadline, the Baltic and Nordic crypto market closes May with a stack of early-June decisions ahead: Firi at Finanstilsynet, the Zondacrypto 30-day deadline peak, Latvijas Banka's fifth CASP licence and Safello's status update.

On Sunday 31 May the Baltic and Nordic crypto market closes May with 31 days left to the MiCA deadline. May saw three regional CASP licences - Paybis Europe, Neverless SIA and TÝR Markets. The Zondacrypto 17 June remediation deadline approaches. ESMA's register lists 207 authorised operators across the EEA.
On Sunday, 31 May 2026, the Baltic and Nordic crypto market closes out May with only 31 days remaining until the end of the MiCA transition period on 1 July. A second consecutive weekend passes without new regulatory announcements, and the region's attention turns to the decisions expected in the first week of June - the Norwegian Finanstilsynet's review of the Firi application, the Estonian Financial Intelligence Unit's decision on the Zondacrypto remediation plan, the Latvijas Banka's fifth CASP licence and the Swedish Finansinspektionen's status update on Safello. Market context: in Sunday's trading session Bitcoin holds the 74,000 US dollar zone after the most significant consolidations of the spring.
May month-end balance - regional MiCA progress and remaining challenges
At the end of May ESMA's interim CASP register lists 207 authorised operators across the European Economic Area, of which roughly 18 operate in the Baltic or Nordic region with local or passported licences. Twelve new MiCA CASP licences were issued across the EEA during May, two of them to regional operators - the Norwegian Finanstilsynet's licence to TÝR Markets AS on 18 May and the Latvijas Banka's licence to Neverless SIA on 25 May. Earlier in the month, on 12 May, the Latvijas Banka also issued a third CASP licence to SIA Paybis Europe with an extended scope of services covering custody and administration of crypto assets, exchange, order execution, transfers and advisory.
The most significant regional event in May was the Estonian Financial Intelligence Unit's partial suspension on 18 May of the operating licence of BB Trade Estonia OÜ - the Zondacrypto operator - with a 30-day deadline to remedy compliance shortcomings. A partial suspension means the crypto exchange can no longer accept new client assets or onboard new customers, while existing users can still withdraw their fiat and crypto holdings. This decision is the region's most notable regulatory intervention signal in the final months of the transition period and underscores Estonia's increasing supervisory firmness on the eve of the final phase of market consolidation.
Norway - early June decisive for the Firi decision
In Norway the focus at month-end is on Firi - the region's largest crypto exchange with more than 400,000 verified users - which remains in the Finanstilsynet's application review phase. Market participants expect the decision in the first week of June or within the first ten days. Firi's management publicly emphasises that the exchange's operating structure is already fully aligned with MiCA requirements and that only formal administrative procedures remain. The duration of application processing is typical of Finanstilsynet's standard procedure, which usually takes four to six months from the moment a complete application is submitted.
This end-of-May situation contrasts sharply with the success of TÝR Markets AS. TÝR Markets, which on 18 May received Norway's first MiCA CASP licence for a crypto-only operator, has already started active commercial operations in the Swedish and Danish markets via the MiCA passport mechanism. In industry experts' view, this is an important precedent - confirmation that a small regional jurisdiction with a functioning national regulator can provide full access to the entire EEA market without requiring operators to relocate their business to larger financial jurisdictions such as Germany, Malta or Ireland.
Other Norwegian operators - Bare Bitcoin, K33 and NBX - remain in the application review phase. NBX, which retains its listing on the Oslo exchange, is preparing for an extraordinary general meeting in the first week of June to discuss an additional capital raise in connection with securing a MiCA licence. The Norwegian transition-period extension to 30 June remains in force and national operators continue to operate on the basis of their prior VASP authorisation. The first Norwegian MiCA licence, granted in May to AK Jensen, continues to illustrate the broader transition of market participants - traditional financial services providers - to regulated crypto service provision.
Estonia - peak of the Zondacrypto 30-day deadline
In Estonia, 31 May is symbolically pivotal - it falls midway between the first and second halves of the 30-day deadline imposed on 18 May. The 30-day deadline for Zondacrypto operator BB Trade Estonia OÜ to remedy compliance shortcomings officially expires on 17 June. In the middle of this window, market attention is focused on whether the operator can present convincing evidence of remediation - including for the "TeamPL" token listed without the MiCA-required white paper - to both the Financial Intelligence Unit and publicly to its customer base.
Following the recent uptick in client withdrawal requests, Zondacrypto publicly confirmed that all existing clients can withdraw their fiat and crypto holdings under standard procedures and that the regulator's partial suspension does not affect outflows. In market participants' view, three main scenarios remain in play for the week of 17 June - full restoration of the licence with improved compliance procedures, partial restriction of activity with an additional review schedule, or full revocation of the licence.
In broader Estonian context, the market continues to shrink - the Finantsinspektsioon's latest data sets list five active VASP operators, only one of which holds a full MiCA CASP licence. Before 2023 Estonia was one of the largest crypto service jurisdictions in the European Union with more than 300 registered operators, but the gradual consolidation has guided the industry towards a small but fully regulated core, in which the resolution of the Zondacrypto situation will be a significant symbol.
Latvia - fifth CASP licence and another MiCA consolidation milestone
In Latvia the Latvijas Banka continues the gradual review of CASP applications following the fourth licence granted to Neverless SIA on 25 May. Industry sources indicate that the fifth formal decision could be announced in the first or second week of June. At the end of May the Latvijas Banka is processing five active formal applications and twelve pre-submission consultation cases, pointing to a steady but careful pipeline of further authorisations. Statements from the Financial Innovation Division continue to emphasise a careful but consistent approach with an individualised assessment of each application.
Latvia's approach with a 12-month national transition period until 30 December continues to give the regulator capacity to thoroughly assess each application. This differs from Lithuania's choice of a tighter six-month transition period ending on 31 December, as well as from Estonia's and Malta's full 18-month grandfathering periods. Latvia has chosen the middle path, and this approach is viewed positively in the region - the regulator has received favourable assessments from both local and international industry organisations for its professional but not excessively cautious approach.
In May Latvia issued two CASP licences in total - on 12 May to SIA Paybis Europe with an extended scope of services covering custody, exchange, order execution, transfers and advisory, and on 25 May to Neverless SIA. This is the region's highest monthly licence issuance pace in 2026 and points to the Latvijas Banka's ability to deliver a steady application review flow even in the closing months of the transition period.
Lithuania - the 31 December deadline approaches, market consolidation continues
The Lietuvos bankas continues the region's largest market consolidation process. Out of approximately 370 to 800 registered virtual asset service providers under the prior national regime, MiCA CASP applications have been filed by only around 30 operators, of which three have received a full licence - Robinhood Europe, Nuvei Liquidity and Decentralized (the Coingate brand). Operators not planning to continue under the MiCA regime must commence client fund return and business wind-down procedures by Lithuania's chosen national transition deadline of 31 December.
The Lietuvos bankas's statement earlier in the week again urged investors to check the MiCA status of their service provider before 1 July and, if the operator has not filed an application or does not plan to continue, to start planning fund transfers to licensed alternatives. The regulator explains that at the end of the transition period the process of client fund withdrawal can take several days to weeks, depending on the operator's administrative capacity and the volume of transactions involved.
The Lietuvos bankas's stance at the end of May remains markedly firm - the regulator has publicly warned that after 1 July unlicensed operators face significant financial sanctions, website blocking and, in some cases, criminal liability with potential prison sentences of up to four years for company executives. This aggressive stance contrasts with the dialogue-based style of Latvia and Finland but reflects Lithuania's historically larger market volume and correspondingly broader consolidation needs.
Finland and Sweden - regional stability
In Finland Coinmotion and Northcrypto continue to operate under previously granted MiCA CASP licences. At the end of May Coinmotion described the execution of its strategic plan to expand into the Swedish market and a partnership with two Swedish pension fund managers. This partnership extends access to MiCA-regulated digital asset products in private pension portfolios and gives Finland a unique position in the region - the only jurisdiction where the crypto sector is directly integrated with traditional pension products. At the start of 2026 Coinmotion also began automated reporting of client crypto transactions to the Finnish Tax Administration under the DAC8 directive and the CARF framework.
Northcrypto continues to operate as one of Finland's most active crypto operators with a broad offering of more than 260 crypto assets in a MiCA-licensed environment. At the end of May the company has not publicly announced any major changes to its commercial activity, which aligns with the Finanssivalvonta's supervisory style - stable operation in the closing months of the transition period without instability signals to the customer base.
In Sweden Safello's application processing continues under Finansinspektionen supervision, although Safello already received full MiCA authorisation in October 2025 and launched its expansion into the Finnish market in February 2026. The company's first-quarter report published in May pointed to a 28 % decline in net turnover to 140.5 million Swedish kronor, reflecting the broader consolidation of the crypto market in early 2026. At the same time, Bitwise's listing of seven SEK-denominated crypto ETPs on Nasdaq Stockholm continues to attract growing investor interest - it has been the main development in Sweden's regulated crypto investment product market in 2026.
Denmark - quiet preparation
In Denmark Finanstilsynet continues to use the full 18-month grandfathering period. As of Sunday Denmark has no nationally issued MiCA CASP licences - the market is based on passported operators from Norway (TÝR Markets already active and Firi in pending status), Finland (Coinmotion) and several other EEA countries. The Danish regulator's approach remains consultative and oriented towards industry dialogue, in line with the traditionally moderate and dialogue-based style of Denmark's regulatory culture.
In the Danish market no publicly significant changes have been recorded over the past week as of Sunday. The main focus remains on whether the TÝR Markets activity expansion in the Danish market planned for the first week of June will lead to the first broader Norway-Denmark crypto-sector passport convergence. This is a potentially significant regional market integration development that may also influence the future strategic choices of other national operators.
European context - MiCA review consultation continues
In the broader European context, the European Commission's MiCA regime review consultation, opened on 20 May, continues. The consultation will remain active until 31 August, and its results will be the basis for the first substantive revision of the MiCA regime planned for 2027. Regional industry organisations - the Nordic Fintech Association and the Baltic Banking Association - are preparing formal submissions setting out their positions on stablecoin issuer deposit guarantees, the practical application of the passport mechanism and the standards of cooperation between competent authorities in cross-border crisis situations.
At the same time, the IG Group and Bitpanda partnership announced on 21 May continues to generate discussion in the region. IG Europe plans to expand crypto trading services across Europe using Bitpanda's MiCA-licensed infrastructure. This is another notable illustration of how traditional financial firms are using the MiCA-regulated crypto sector to expand their service offering without building a full crypto competence core in-house. In the view of regional traditional financial services providers, this model may become the standard approach in the Scandinavian banking sector in the second half of 2026.
Market context and the first-week-of-June agenda
In Sunday evening trading Bitcoin holds the 74,000 US dollar zone after the most significant consolidations of the spring, which occurred in May. Ethereum trades close to 2,020 US dollars and overall crypto market activity remains moderately stable. The regional crypto sector's market reaction remains measured - investors continue to focus on global macroeconomic factors and the US Federal Reserve's June meeting base rate policy, which will materially affect the broader picture for risk asset categories.
The regional picture on Sunday evening is stable, with rising intensity expected in the first weeks of June. The main attention remains focused on the Finanstilsynet's Firi decision in the first week of June, the final Zondacrypto status in Estonia around 17 June, the Latvijas Banka's fifth CASP licence in early or mid-June and Safello's application status confirmation in Sweden. These four decisions will shape the structure of the regional crypto sector after the 1 July MiCA deadline.
Investors using Baltic or Nordic crypto exchanges are still advised, before 1 July, to verify their operator's MiCA licence status in ESMA's interim CASP register or in the relevant national regulator's register. That is the only sound guarantee that the service provider will be able to continue operations after the end of the transition period and that client funds will be protected under the unified European Union regime. If an operator has not published a clear statement on its MiCA application status or transition plans, that is a justified warning sign for cautious client behaviour.
Sources
- ESMA - Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) overview
- European Commission - Targeted consultation on the review of MiCA Regulation
- Latvijas Banka - Crypto-asset service providers
- Crowdfund Insider - Paybis Gains MiCA, PSD2 Approval In Latvia (12.05.2026)
- Cointelegraph - Crypto exchange Paybis secures MiCA and PSD2 licenses in Latvia
- Finanstilsynet - Týr Markets AS får tillatelse som CASP-foretak (18.05.2026)