The EU will enforce stricter crypto AML rules from July 10, 2027, banning privacy coins and anonymous accounts on regulated platforms. Transactions of €1,000 or more will require customer checks, while self-hosted wallet transfers remain outside direct KYC rules.
The European Union will introduce stricter anti-money laundering rules for cryptocurrency platforms from July 10, 2027. Exchanges, custodians and other regulated crypto firms will face new customer checks and limits on anonymity-focused services.
Regulation (EU) 2024/1624 establishes a single set of AML standards for all member states. It also introduces new controls for cash payments, company ownership records and several industries outside banking.
Crypto Platforms Face New Privacy Coin and KYC Rules
Crypto-asset service providers will not be allowed to maintain anonymous accounts or accounts that increase transaction anonymity. Regulated platforms will also be prohibited from supporting anonymity-enhancing crypto assets.
The rules could require EU-regulated exchanges and custodians to remove privacy coins from their services. Assets commonly placed in this category include Monero, Zcash and Dash. The regulation does not ban private ownership of these assets. Instead, it restricts their use through regulated service providers.
Moreover, crypto firms must conduct customer due diligence on occasional transactions of €1,000 or more. Providers will need to identify customers, verify submitted information and review transactions where the legal threshold applies.
The requirements cover transactions handled by regulated intermediaries. They will apply to crypto-to-crypto and fiat-to-crypto services when a covered provider processes the activity.
Separately, the EU Travel Rule requires regulated firms to collect information about senders and recipients. Transfers involving self-hosted wallets may require added checks when a regulated provider participates in a transaction worth €1,000 or more.
Self-Hosted Wallet Transfers Stay Outside Direct KYC Rules
Direct transfers between self-hosted wallets will not automatically require identity checks under the new anti-money laundering regulation. The customer verification duties apply to exchanges, custodians and other firms classified as obliged entities.
People can still send crypto directly from one private wallet to another without completing KYC checks, provided no regulated company handles the transfer. The rules mainly apply when an exchange, custodian or another supervised service takes part.
Checks may still be required when a transfer moves between a private wallet and a regulated crypto platform. In such cases, the company may ask for details about the wallet owner, especially when the transfer reaches the set threshold or raises compliance concerns.
Self-custody will remain legal under the EU framework, and authorities will not require every blockchain address to be linked to a verified identity. Regulated crypto firms must, however, monitor transactions, report suspicious activity and keep the customer records required under EU law.
These measures place the main compliance burden on businesses that hold, transfer or exchange crypto assets for customers. Firms operating across the bloc must prepare their account systems, transaction controls and customer verification processes before the rules become applicable.
EU Sets Cash Limit and Expands AML Coverage
The regulation also introduces an EU-wide €10,000 limit on commercial cash payments. Member states may adopt or retain lower national limits. Payments and deposits made through banks and certain regulated financial institutions are subject to separate rules.
Meanwhile, obliged traders and service providers must conduct customer checks for occasional cash transactions of at least €3,000. These checks include identifying and verifying the customer before completing the transaction.
The updated framework expands anti-money laundering duties to luxury goods dealers, crowdfunding services, professional football clubs, football agents and investment migration businesses. Traders handling high-value vehicles, boats and aircraft will also face reporting and customer-check requirements.
Companies, trusts and some non-EU entities operating within the bloc will face updated beneficial ownership disclosure rules. These records aim to identify the people who ultimately own or control a legal entity.
The EU’s new Anti-Money Laundering Authority will support common supervision and coordinate national regulators. The single rulebook replaces varying national approaches with directly applicable standards for covered businesses across the EU.
Disclaimer : Crypto News India does not recommend that any cryptocurrency should be bought, sold, or held by you. Do conduct your own due diligence and consult your financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
