Eligible companies can also continue to evaluate or pursue their own MiCA-focused crypto asset service provider (CASP) licenses in parallel while integrating BitGo Europe’s infrastructure, BitGo said.
The final deadline for crypto firms to have transitioned to the MiCA regime is the end of this month, a regulatory calculation that will force some firms to close their businesses.
Industry estimates suggest that Europe had more than 3,000 registered crypto companies by 2024, with Poland alone accounting for over 1,400 registrations. As of May 2026, there are 194 authorized CASPs (including credit institutions) and it is expected that around 75% of the pre-MiCA population will lose registration status when transition periods expire, according to law firm Hogan Lovells.
Belshe said firms don’t have to go bankrupt due to MiCA’s regulatory requirements, adding that regulators are aware of BitGo’s compliance-enhancing infrastructure offering. Regarding fees for the crypto compliance service, Belshe said it is relatively inexpensive and varies by product.
“There’s some monthly minimum that you pay similar to what’s always been there. It’s a couple of $1,000 a month that scales with volume,” he said. “Then customers can either go to variable-based plans, where they pay more per transaction, or they can use static-based plans, where they have some kind of fixed fee, and they pay less.”



