Revolut is cutting off access to USDT for customers across the European Economic Area and Switzerland, with the full delisting scheduled to wrap up by August 31, 2026. The decision, driven by the EU’s sweeping Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), puts Revolut among a growing list of European crypto platforms quietly stepping away from the world’s largest stablecoin — and raises real questions for the millions of users caught in the middle.
Revolut confirmed the move affects customers in the European Economic Area and Switzerland, while users in other parts of the world will see no change to their USDT access. The platform, headquartered in the United Kingdom and originally launched in 2017 with crypto trading as a core feature, expanded its crypto services in EEA countries as recently as 2024. Now it is unwinding one of the most widely traded assets from that same market.
The scale of what’s being removed matters. USDT is issued by Tether, the company behind a stablecoin with a market capitalization of $184 billion — making it the dominant dollar-pegged token in the global crypto market. Losing access to it is not a minor inconvenience for active traders.
The EEA covers EU member states plus Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein — all jurisdictions where MiCA applies, according to the European Securities and Markets Authority. That part of the scope is straightforward.
Switzerland is a different story. The country is neither an EU member nor part of the EEA, and it is not directly covered by MiCA. Yet Revolut included Swiss customers in the delisting without offering an explanation. The company did not respond to requests for clarification on why Switzerland was added, nor did it provide a full list of jurisdictions where it currently offers crypto services.
That silence leaves Swiss users without a clear regulatory rationale for losing access — an unusual gap in a decision that is otherwise framed as a compliance measure.
The delisting is not starting from scratch. Revolut had already removed USDT from its Revolut X trading platform for EEA customers before this announcement. The latest step completes the removal from the broader retail offering in those markets. European users received notifications outlining the August 31, 2026 deadline, giving them a window to adjust their holdings or transfer funds.
Revolut framed the decision as the direct result of a periodic review of its cryptocurrency offering in light of MiCA’s evolving requirements. The regulation, which sets out rules for crypto-asset issuers and service providers operating in the EU and EEA, requires stablecoin issuers to obtain authorization if they want their tokens to remain available on compliant platforms.
MiCA places the compliance burden not just on exchanges but on the stablecoin issuers themselves. Platforms like Revolut operating in the EEA face pressure to delist tokens whose issuers have not gone through the authorization process. A spokesperson for Revolut confirmed the decision was taken following a review of crypto services and risk considerations under that framework.
What makes this particularly significant is the broader pattern it represents. Revolut is not acting in isolation. Across the EU, crypto platforms have been phasing out USDT over the same period — a coordinated market response to a single issuer’s regulatory stance.
The root cause, at least in regulatory terms, traces back to Tether. The company behind the $184 billion stablecoin chose not to seek authorization under MiCA, leaving exchanges with a choice: delist the token or risk operating outside regulatory guidelines in the EU. Revolut’s decision follows that same logic.
That choice by Tether reverberates well beyond Revolut. It effectively forced every major EU-regulated platform to reckon with whether USDT’s trading volume was worth the compliance exposure. For a company like Revolut — which holds a banking license and operates across dozens of regulated markets — the answer was straightforward.
The longer-term implication is harder to ignore. If Tether maintains its position on MiCA authorization, the EU’s crypto users may face a permanently fragmented stablecoin market, where the globally dominant token is unavailable on the most accessible platforms. That gap creates real opportunity for MiCA-compliant alternatives, and it is not hard to see why some platforms are already building toward that outcome.
Customers in the European Economic Area (EEA) and Switzerland will be affected by the USDT delisting.
Revolut’s delisting follows a review under the EU’s MiCA regulatory framework and reflects Tether’s choice not to seek MiCA authorization.
Yes, USDT support remains unchanged outside the EEA and Switzerland.
The delisting is scheduled to complete by August 31, 2026.
Article produced with the assistance of artificial intelligence and reviewed by the editorial team.


