Coinhouse secured its MiCA License from France’s AMF, giving the Paris firm wider access across the European Union. The approval covers brokerage, custody, transfers, advisory, and portfolio management for crypto assets. It also places Coinhouse ahead of France’s July 2026 licensing deadline.
Coinhouse received Crypto Asset Service Provider accreditation under France’s MiCA framework. The approval replaces its earlier PSAN status, which came under France’s national crypto regime. It also gives the company a stronger legal base for cross-border operations.

The MiCA License allows Coinhouse to offer several regulated crypto services across EU markets. These services include buying, selling, exchange, custody, administration, and transfers of crypto assets. Additionally, the approval covers investment advice and portfolio management.
Coinhouse started in 2014 as La Maison du Bitcoin. The company later became one of France’s early registered Digital Asset Service Providers. Now, the MiCA License moves it from local registration to EU-wide authorization.
The MiCA License gives Coinhouse passporting rights across all EU Member States. Therefore, the company can expand without seeking separate national registrations in each market. This structure creates a simpler route for regulated growth.
Coinhouse already serves French-speaking markets such as Belgium and Luxembourg. However, the new approval supports broader access to retail, corporate, and institutional clients. The company can now push its services across Europe under one framework.
The MiCA License also strengthens Coinhouse’s position against slower-moving competitors. Many French PSAN firms still need approval before the national regime ends. Hence, Coinhouse gains both regulatory certainty and a commercial edge.
France will phase out its national PSAN regime on July 1, 2026. After that date, crypto service providers need PSCA authorization to keep operating legally. The MiCA License therefore becomes essential for firms serving French clients.
The AMF has warned that unlicensed providers must stop activities after the cutoff. Companies that continue without approval may face legal penalties and financial sanctions. Consequently, early authorization gives Coinhouse operational continuity before the deadline.
The MiCA License also reflects Europe’s shift toward a single crypto rulebook. MiCA aims to harmonize crypto oversight and reduce fragmented national regimes. For Coinhouse, the approval turns compliance into a platform for EU expansion.
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