OKX secured a Payment Institution license in Malta on Monday, expanding its regulatory footprint in Europe. The authorization allowed the exchange to offer stablecoin payment services under the European Union’s updated framework. The move aligned OKX’s payment products with the Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation and the Second Payment Services Directive.
The OKX expansion came amid stricter rules from European regulators on stablecoin-linked payment services. Under MiCA and PSD2, crypto-asset service providers offering payment functions tied to electronic money tokens must hold either a Payment Institution or Electronic Money Institution license. OKX had already received a MiCA license from the Malta Financial Services Authority in January 2025, placing it within the bloc’s unified digital asset regime.
Coin Bureau reported that OKX secured the Malta authorization as part of a broader push into regulated payment services. The license allowed the exchange to operate stablecoin payment products across the European Union under the revised PSD2 framework. That shift occurred because the updated directive required crypto platforms to meet the same standards as traditional payment firms when handling electronic money tokens.
OKX expands crypto payments. Source: Coin Bureau/XErald Ghoos, Chief Executive Officer of OKX Europe, said the license ensured that recently launched payment products operated on a compliant footing. He added that Europe had chosen regulatory clarity for digital assets. His remarks framed stablecoins as tools for cross-border efficiency, provided platforms adhered to strict guardrails.
The approval also signaled Malta’s continued role as a regulatory hub for digital asset firms. By granting both MiCA and Payment Institution authorizations, the Malta Financial Services Authority positioned the jurisdiction as a gateway for exchanges targeting the European Union market.
The Malta license supported the rollout of OKX Pay and the OKX Card across Europe. Officially launched in late January, the OKX Card enabled users to spend crypto assets and stablecoins in daily transactions. The product supported stablecoins such as Circle’s USDC and the Paxos-issued Global Dollar.
Source: X
This expansion followed a partnership with Mastercard announced at the end of last month. Under that arrangement, OKX integrated its crypto payment card into established card networks, enabling stablecoin balances to flow through conventional payment rails. The strategy reflected a broader effort by exchanges to connect blockchain-based assets with real economy spending.
OKX Ventures also backed the stablecoin issuance platform STBL, reinforcing the firm’s positioning around compliant digital money products. That investment indicated the exchange viewed stablecoins as infrastructure rather than speculative instruments. By combining regulatory licenses, payment products, and venture exposure, OKX built a layered approach to European expansion.
The broader regulatory environment shaped OKX’s timing. MiCA introduced harmonized rules for digital asset service providers across the bloc. PSD2 amendments extended payment compliance obligations to crypto platforms handling electronic money tokens. Exchanges that failed to secure proper authorization risked losing access to the European market.
OKX responded by consolidating its European operations under Maltese oversight. This structure allowed the firm to passport services across member states while meeting unified compliance standards. The license, therefore, reduced regulatory fragmentation, which previously required exchanges to navigate country-specific regimes.
Stablecoins sat at the center of this regulatory shift. European policymakers classified certain stablecoins as electronic money tokens, placing them under payment law rather than pure crypto regulation. That classification forced exchanges to treat stablecoin services as regulated payment activity rather than ancillary trading features.
For OKX, the Payment Institution license formalized this distinction. Instead of relying solely on a crypto service authorization, the exchange now operates under a payments framework when facilitating stablecoin transactions. This alignment addressed concerns about consumer protection, settlement transparency, and cross-border transfers.
The regulatory calendar now becomes the next variable for OKX in Europe. MiCA implementation milestones continue through March, tightening operational standards for crypto service providers. If the exchange expands additional payment features under its Malta authorization, further announcements could emerge before that deadline.
The post OKX Expands EU Stablecoin Payments With Malta License appeared first on The Coin Republic.

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