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Mica EMT Issuers in the EU Eligibility, Licence Routes & Practical Roadmap

By Jonathon Richards
– posted 1 hour ago

Stablecoin projects and payment incumbents across Europe face a single, urgent question: how do you become an authorised MiCA EMT issuer in the EU? Since the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2023/1114) brought its stablecoin titles into application, e-money tokens (EMTs) can only be offered to the public or admitted to trading by a credit institution or an authorised electronic money institution (EMI). This page maps the complete authorisation process from initial eligibility through white-paper notification to cross-border passporting giving fintech founders, compliance officers and legal teams a practitioner-grade roadmap.

Introduction

What Is an EMT under MiCA?

An e-money token (EMT) is defined in MiCA as a type of crypto-asset that purports to maintain a stable value by referencing the value of one single official (fiat) currency. In functional terms it is the on-chain equivalent of electronic money, and MiCA’s Title III imposes a dedicated regulatory regime on its issuance, reserve management and redemption. Unlike asset-referenced tokens (ARTs), which may reference a basket of assets, an EMT is anchored to a single currency making it the primary regulatory vehicle for euro- or dollar-denominated stablecoins in the EU.

Why MiCA Matters Now

The titles governing ARTs and EMTs came into application in mid-2024, and the period since has been defined by intensive regulatory implementation. ESMA and the EBA have published interactive rulebooks, Q&As and supervisory expectations, while national competent authorities (NCAs) from the CSSF in Luxembourg to BaFin in Germany have issued procedural guidance tailored to EMT issuers. Level-2 measures, including the Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2024/2984 on white-paper templates, have crystallised the documentation standards every issuer must meet. Multiple projects are actively pursuing authorisations, making 2025–2026 the decisive window for market entry.

At-a-Glance: Who Can Issue an EMT?

Only two categories of entity may offer an EMT to the public or seek its admission to trading in the EU: (1) a credit institution authorised under the CRD/CRR framework, or (2) an electronic money institution authorised under Directive 2009/110/EC (EMD2). In both cases, the issuer must additionally draft and notify a MiCA-compliant crypto-asset white paper to its home NCA before making the offer.

Who Qualifies as an EMT Issuer? Quick Eligibility Checklist

Before investing in white-paper preparation or reserve structuring, teams should confirm baseline eligibility. The following checklist captures the threshold requirements:

  • Authorised entity type: The issuer must hold or obtain authorisation as an EMI under EMD2 or as a credit institution. No other corporate form qualifies for a public offer or admission to trading of EMTs.
  • EU establishment: The issuer must be incorporated and authorised in an EU/EEA Member State. Third-country entities must establish an EU subsidiary or partner with an authorised institution.
  • Triggering activity: MiCA obligations attach when a person makes a public offer of an EMT or seeks its admission to trading on a trading platform within the Union. Purely private, closed distributions may fall outside scope, but the boundaries are narrow and fact-specific.
  • Token classification confirmation: The issuer must be confident the token qualifies as an EMT (single fiat reference) rather than an ART (basket reference) or another crypto-asset. ESMA guidance recommends obtaining or preparing a legal opinion on token classification.
  • Exclusions: Certain limited issuances (e.g., EMTs offered exclusively to qualified investors, or below specific thresholds) may benefit from exemptions, but the exemptions are narrow and do not remove the underlying licence requirement.
  • Significant EMT designation: If an EMT meets the criteria for significance determined by the EBA under its significance assessment framework supervisory responsibility transfers from the home NCA to the EBA. Significance criteria include the size of the customer base, the value of tokens issued, the number and value of transactions, and cross-border usage. Issuers should model these metrics early and plan governance structures accordingly.

Step-by-Step Process to Obtain Authorisation & Launch an EMT in the EU

The authorisation journey divides into two parallel tracks depending on whether the applicant (A) already holds an EMI or credit institution licence, or (B) must obtain one. In both cases the MiCA-specific overlay white paper, reserve compliance, notification runs alongside the prudential process. The indicative end-to-end timeline ranges from roughly 6 weeks (for a well-prepared, already-authorised EMI) to 36 weeks or more (for a start-up applying for an EMI licence and simultaneously preparing MiCA deliverables).

Step 1: Token Classification & Legal Opinion (1–2 Weeks)

The first task is to confirm that the token is an EMT under MiCA. This means verifying that it references a single fiat currency and that it purports to maintain a stable value by reference to that currency’s value. If there is any ambiguity for example, a partially algorithmic stabilisation mechanism, or a reference that blends fiat with other assets a detailed legal analysis is essential. ESMA’s interactive rulebook and Q&A guidance assist in drawing the boundary between EMTs, ARTs and “other” crypto-assets. A formal legal opinion on token classification is not mandated for EMTs in the same way it is for certain other crypto-assets, but it is best practice and expected by most NCAs during the notification process.

Step 2: Decide the Licence Route EMI (EMD2) vs Credit Institution (2–12 Weeks If Already Authorised)

If your entity already holds an EMI licence or a banking licence, the task is a MiCA gap analysis: mapping existing governance, capital, AML and reporting arrangements against the incremental requirements of Title III. Typical remediation for an existing EMI takes 6–16 weeks; for a bank, 8–24 weeks owing to heavier internal governance. If no licence exists, the entity must choose between applying for an EMI licence for stablecoins (the faster route for specialist payment firms) or a credit institution licence (which provides broader operational scope but higher capital and compliance costs). The comparison table below details the trade-offs. A third practical option partnering with an already-authorised issuer as a distributor or under a white-label arrangement may suit teams that need speed over control.

Step 3: White Paper Drafting Content & Machine-Readable Template (4–8 Weeks)

Every EMT offered to the public or admitted to trading must be accompanied by a crypto-asset white paper that complies with Annex III of MiCA. Required disclosures include a description of the issuer and its governance, the rights and obligations attached to the token, the underlying technology, a detailed description of the reserve of assets, redemption procedures, risk factors, and the adverse environmental impact of the consensus mechanism. The Commission ITS (2024/2984) mandates that white papers also be submitted in a machine-readable format using standardised templates. Parallel drafting with risk, treasury and IT teams is strongly recommended to avoid bottlenecks.

Step 4: Notifications Timing & Where to Submit (2–10 Weeks)

MiCA prescribes two distinct notification windows. Under Article 48(6), the issuer must notify its home NCA of its intention to offer the EMT to the public or seek admission to trading at least 40 working days before the intended date. Under Article 51(11), the white paper itself must be notified at least 20 working days before its planned publication date. In practice, many NCAs encourage early engagement well before these formal deadlines. For example, the CSSF in Luxembourg recommends draft sharing via its secure MFT portal before the formal submission, and Banca d’Italia operates a dedicated EMT notification channel with specific local forms. BaFin publishes FAQs on its website addressing common questions about the process flow and completeness checks.

Step 5: Pre-Go-Live Compliance Reserves, Custody, Redemption, AML/KYC (4–12 Weeks)

MiCA requires EMT issuers to maintain reserves of assets equal to 100 % of the EMTs in circulation, invested in secure, low-risk assets in the currency referenced by the token. Reserves must be held by an authorised custodian and segregated from the issuer’s own assets. Daily reconciliation is required. Issuers must also implement a clear redemption mechanism holders must be able to redeem at par value at any time and prepare a redemption plan covering wind-down scenarios. Beyond reserves, issuers must demonstrate robust AML/KYC controls, governance structures (including fit-and-proper requirements for management), business continuity plans and incident-response procedures. The EBA’s supervisory priorities for ART and EMT issuers underline that reserve management, redemption readiness and AML compliance are among the top areas of supervisory focus.

Step 6: Passporting & Market Entry

Once the home NCA has completed its review and the issuer has met all conditions, the authorised EMT issuer can offer the token and seek its admission to trading across the entire EU/EEA under the MiCA passport. EMT passporting across EU markets follows the principle of mutual recognition a white paper approved (or not objected to) by the home NCA is valid Union-wide. However, issuers should be aware that host NCAs may impose local procedural requirements for distribution notifications, and practical timelines vary by jurisdiction. Proactive engagement with target-market NCAs before launch is advisable.

Step 7: Ongoing Obligations & Supervisory Interaction (First 12 Months)

Authorisation is not the finish line. MiCA imposes ongoing reporting obligations, including data submissions to ESMA’s Article 109 register, periodic white-paper updates when material changes occur, and regular prudential disclosures. External audits of reserve holdings are required. If the EMT reaches significance thresholds, supervisory responsibility shifts to the EBA, triggering additional reporting and enhanced governance standards. Industry observers expect NCAs to be particularly active during issuers’ first year of operation, with on-site inspections and targeted data requests likely.

MiCA EMT Issuer EU: Licence Route & NCA Comparison Tables

Table A EMI (EMD2) vs Credit Institution Licence

Feature Electronic Money Institution (EMI) Route Credit Institution (Bank) Route
Primary legal basis EMD2 + MiCA Title III CRD/CRR + MiCA Title III
Typical time to readiness (if already authorised) 6–16 weeks (gap remediation) 8–24 weeks (governance + internal approvals)
Capital & prudential baseline EMD2 own-funds requirements + MiCA overlays Bank capital rules (generally higher)
Supervisory stance NCA payment supervisor / integrated approach Banking supervisor, integrated risk management
Practical pros Faster for payment incumbents; specialist focus Brand trust; broader balance sheet for reserves
Practical cons May need stronger liquidity reporting; market perception Higher compliance cost; banking constraints on crypto exposure

Table B Selected NCA Comparison for EMT Issuers

NCA (Home State) White-Paper Processing & Notices Typical Timeline (Notice Windows) Notable Local Practice
CSSF (Luxembourg) Electronic submission via CSSF MFT portal; draft sharing recommended 40 working days (intention); 20 working days (white paper) Clear templates and proactive MiCA readiness communications
ACPR / AMF (France) Coordinated AMF/ACPR review for issuers; white papers submitted to ACPR/AMF 40 / 20 working days per MiCA Active supervisory dialogues; first EMT notifications published
BaFin (Germany) Integrated payment services + MiCA process; BaFin FAQs available 40 / 20 working days; process FAQs provided Strong supervisory scrutiny on AML & custody relationships
Banca d’Italia (Italy) Dedicated EMT guidance and notification channel 40 / 20 working days; local procedural forms required Active monitoring of reserve custodian arrangements
Central Bank of Ireland (CBI) Bank licensing route often used; MiCA compliance noted across CBI guidance 40 / 20 working days (MiCA default) Host for some non-EU bank subsidiaries seeking EU authorisation

Key Requirements & Eligibility for MiCA EMT Issuers

Corporate & Prudential Eligibility

Article 48 of MiCA is unambiguous: no person may offer an EMT to the public or seek its admission to trading in the EU unless it is the issuer of that EMT and is either a credit institution or an EMI authorised under EMD2. The issuer must be a legal entity established in an EU Member State and subject to the prudential framework applicable to its licence type. For EMIs, this means meeting EMD2 own-funds requirements (minimum initial capital of EUR 350,000) plus any MiCA-specific overlays. For credit institutions, the full CRD/CRR capital framework applies.

White Paper Core Content & Template Obligations

The EMT white paper must contain all information specified in Annex III of MiCA. This includes detailed disclosures on the issuer’s identity, governance and management, the token’s characteristics and rights, the technology and DLT protocol, the reserve of assets, risks, and the adverse environmental impact of the consensus mechanism. The white paper must carry a prominent warning that it has not been approved by any NCA. Under the Commission ITS (2024/2984), issuers must additionally submit the white paper in a machine-readable format using the standardised templates. A MiCA white paper checklist (download) is an essential planning tool for project teams to ensure completeness before submission. The issuer is liable for the information contained in the white paper, and material inaccuracies can give rise to civil liability claims from token holders.

Reserves, Redemption & Custody

EMT issuers must maintain a reserve of assets equal to 100 % of the claims of EMT holders at all times. The reserve must be invested in secure, low-risk assets denominated in the same currency as the referenced fiat currency. Reserves must be held with authorised custodians and legally segregated from the issuer’s own estate. Daily reconciliation between the reserve and the outstanding token supply is mandatory. Holders must be entitled to redeem the monetary value of their EMTs at par value at any time, and the issuer must have a credible redemption plan in place for orderly wind-down scenarios. These reserve and redemption rules are among the most operationally demanding elements of MiCA compliance for EMT issuers.

AML/KYC & Governance Expectations

MiCA does not replace existing EU anti-money laundering obligations it layers on top of them. EMT issuers must comply with the applicable AML directives and regulations (including the EU’s evolving AML package), conduct thorough customer due diligence, implement transaction monitoring, and maintain sanctions-screening processes. AML/KYC for EMT issuers requires a joint review with AML teams and technology providers to ensure that on-chain analytics, wallet screening and travel-rule compliance are embedded from day one. Governance standards include fit-and-proper requirements for directors and senior management, internal controls, conflict-of-interest policies, and outsourcing frameworks. The EBA’s supervisory priorities emphasise that governance and AML controls will be key areas of focus during the initial supervision cycle.

Practical Roadmap, Timeline, Costs & Documentation Checklist

Indicative Timeline

For an already-authorised EMI, the end-to-end timeline from project initiation to public offer can range from approximately 6 to 16 weeks, assuming token classification is clear and no material gaps exist in governance or reserve arrangements. For a credit institution, internal approvals typically extend this to 8 to 24 weeks. For a start-up seeking a new EMI licence concurrently, the total timeline can reach 24 to 36 weeks or longer, depending on NCA processing times. Key milestone anchors include the 40-working-day intention notification and the 20-working-day white-paper notification these cannot be compressed and should be factored into backwards planning from the target launch date. NCAs such as the CSSF and Banca d’Italia encourage pre-submission engagement, which can reduce the risk of delays during the formal notification window.

Estimated Cost Bands (Illustrative)

  • White paper drafting: EUR 20,000–80,000, depending on token complexity and the need for external legal/technical input.
  • Legal & compliance remediation: EUR 40,000–250,000, covering governance gap analysis, AML programme build-out, reserve custodian negotiation and regulatory counsel.
  • Capital / reserve custody costs: Variable driven by the volume of EMTs to be issued, custodian fees and the yield characteristics of eligible reserve assets.

These ranges are conservative and illustrative. Actual costs depend on the issuer’s existing infrastructure, chosen NCA and the complexity of the token’s technical and economic design.

Documentation Checklist

The following documents are typically required for a complete EMT authorisation and notification package:

  • Corporate documents: Certificate of incorporation, articles of association, shareholder structure, UBO declarations.
  • Governance documentation: Organisational chart, fit-and-proper files for directors, internal control and risk-management policies.
  • AML/KYC policies: Customer due diligence procedures, transaction monitoring framework, sanctions-screening protocols, suspicious activity reporting processes.
  • Technology & security: DLT protocol documentation, smart-contract audit reports, cybersecurity and business continuity plans.
  • Reserve custodian agreements: Custody contracts, segregation arrangements, reconciliation procedures.
  • Audited financials: Most recent audited accounts of the issuer (or pro-forma financials for new entities).
  • Legal opinion on token classification: Confirming EMT status under MiCA.
  • White paper package: Published version and machine-readable format per Commission ITS.
  • Redemption plan: Procedures for orderly wind-down and holder redemption.

Sources

FAQs

What are the licensing requirements under MiCA for EMT issuers?
EMTs can only be issued by a credit institution or an authorised electronic money institution (EMI). Any offer to the public or admission to trading additionally requires the issuer to draft and notify a MiCA-compliant white paper to its home NCA and to comply with reserve, redemption and governance rules set out in Title III of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114.
An e-money token (EMT) is a type of crypto-asset that purports to maintain a stable value by referencing the value of one single official fiat currency. It is the on-chain functional equivalent of electronic money and is subject to the specific regulatory regime in MiCA Title III.
MiCA — formally Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 — is the EU-level regulation that creates a harmonised framework for the issuance and provision of services related to crypto-assets across all Member States. As a directly applicable regulation, it does not require national transposition and provides uniform rules from Lisbon to Helsinki.
Yes — one or the other is mandatory. An EMT issuer must be either an EMI authorised under EMD2 or a credit institution authorised under the CRD/CRR framework. MiCA layers EMT-specific obligations (white paper, reserves, redemption rights) on top of the underlying prudential licence.
Prepare a white paper that complies with Annex III of MiCA and the machine-readable template requirements of Commission ITS 2024/2984. Submit it via the home NCA’s designated channel — many NCAs require electronic upload through a secure portal. The white paper must be notified at least 20 working days before its planned publication date, and the issuer must notify its intention to offer the EMT at least 40 working days before the offer or admission to trading. Refer to the procedural pages of your home NCA (e.g., CSSF, BaFin, Banca d’Italia) for local submission requirements.
If an EMT meets the significance criteria established by the EBA — based on factors such as customer base size, value of tokens issued, transaction volumes and cross-border reach — supervisory responsibility transfers from the home NCA to the EBA. This triggers enhanced governance, capital and reporting requirements. Issuers should model these metrics early and prepare for the possibility of direct EBA supervision.
Yes. Once the home NCA has completed its review and the issuer has fulfilled all MiCA conditions, the EMT benefits from the EU passport and can be offered to the public or admitted to trading across all Member States without separate authorisations. However, issuers should note that some host NCAs may have local procedural requirements for distribution notifications, and proactive engagement with target-market regulators is advisable.

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Mica EMT Issuers in the EU Eligibility, Licence Routes & Practical Roadmap

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