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Germany Crypto Markets Supervision Act (KMAG)
Germany’s KMAG implements national supervision powers for MiCAR, designating BaFin as competent authority and setting German rules for authorization, enforcement, reporting, transition and sanctions.
At a glance
Overview
Germany’s Act on the Supervision of Markets in Crypto-Assets (Gesetz zur Aufsicht über Märkte für Kryptowerte, or Kryptomärkteaufsichtsgesetz – KMAG) is Germany’s national supervisory statute for the EU Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCAR). As of June 3, 2026, KMAG is in force. The Act was issued through the Financial Market Digitalisation Act (Finanzmarktdigitalisierungsgesetz – FinmadiG), published in the Federal Law Gazette as BGBl. 2024 I No. 438, and has staged commencement dates, with the general KMAG framework linked to July 1, 2024 and significant MiCAR-aligned provisions beginning December 28 and December 30, 2024.
Scope and regulatory role
KMAG is designed to carry out Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 in Germany. It applies to crypto-assets within MiCAR and excludes categories that MiCAR itself excludes. The statute designates the Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) as the competent authority for MiCAR supervision, while also assigning cooperation roles to the Deutsche Bundesbank. BaFin’s remit covers institutions and other firms subject to MiCAR and KMAG, as well as trading on crypto-asset trading platforms. The law also connects German crypto supervision with DORA and the EU transfer-of-funds regime for crypto-asset transfers.
The Act should be understood as a national companion statute rather than a substitute for the EU regulation. MiCAR sets the core EU regime for crypto-asset offers, asset-referenced tokens, e-money tokens, crypto-asset service providers and market abuse. KMAG supplies Germany-specific supervisory process, authority powers, transition rules and sanctions that allow BaFin and the Bundesbank to administer that regime domestically.
Key provisions of Germany’s Crypto Markets Supervision Act
- BaFin supervision: KMAG gives BaFin general order-making, information-gathering, publication and intervention powers where needed to prevent or address supervisory breaches or market disruptions.
- Authorization controls: BaFin may order the immediate cessation and wind-down of unauthorized public offers of asset-referenced tokens, unauthorized public offers of e-money tokens, or unauthorized crypto-asset services.
- Offers, whitepapers and marketing: The Act contains German enforcement powers for public offers, admissions to trading, crypto-asset whitepapers, modified whitepapers and marketing communications.
- CASP supervision and reporting: KMAG sets notification and reporting duties for institutions, including changes in legal form, cross-border services, qualifying holdings, outsourcing, financial condition and other supervisory information.
- Market abuse investigations: BaFin receives powers to request information, summon persons, inspect records and pursue suspected breaches of MiCAR Title VI on market abuse.
- Custody and insolvency protections: Section 45 treats customer crypto-assets held in crypto custody as belonging to the customer, subject to statutory exceptions.
- Sanctions: KMAG includes criminal and administrative fine provisions for unauthorized activity, market-abuse conduct, non-compliance with MiCAR obligations and failures to follow supervisory orders.
Jurisdictional impact
For Germany-based crypto-asset service providers, exchanges, trading platforms, custodians and token issuers, KMAG functions as the national statute that makes MiCAR supervision operational in Germany. It does not replace MiCAR; instead, it supplies German procedural powers, local reporting requirements, enforcement mechanics, transition rules and sanctions around the directly applicable EU regulation. The Act is therefore best read together with MiCAR, BaFin publications, Bundesbank MiCAR information and later German implementing ordinances.
Status and timeline
The Bundestag adopted FinmadiG on December 18, 2024, and the Act was issued in the Federal Law Gazette on December 27, 2024. Article 23 gives KMAG staged commencement dates: most of Article 1 was linked to July 1, 2024; selected provisions began December 28, 2024; and further provisions, including parts connected to crypto-asset services and market infrastructure, began December 30, 2024. Section 50 created a transition route for certain existing German authorization holders, with continued reliance ending on authorization or notification outcomes, applicable Article 60 MiCAR deadlines, or December 31, 2025 at the latest.
As of June 3, 2026, the consolidated KMAG text reflects later amendments, including amendments published in March 2026. A near-term implementation checkpoint is the Crypto Markets Notification Ordinance (Kryptomärkteanzeigenverordnung – KMAnzV), issued in May 2026 and scheduled to apply from July 1, 2026, which specifies notices and document submissions under KMAG.
Key provisions
BaFin Competent Authority Role
Designates BaFin as competent MiCAR authority and sets cooperation with the Deutsche Bundesbank for assigned supervisory tasks.
General Supervisory Powers
Authorizes BaFin orders, information requests, publications and online-interface measures to address MiCAR or KMAG breaches.
Unauthorized Activity Controls
Permits BaFin to order cessation and wind-down of unauthorized ART offers, EMT offers or crypto-asset services.
Institution Reporting Duties
Requires institutions to notify BaFin and Bundesbank of legal, financial, ownership, outsourcing and cross-border service changes.
CASP Service Restrictions
Allows BaFin to suspend or prohibit crypto-asset services where MiCAR or KMAG breaches, market-abuse breaches or customer harms arise.
Market Abuse Investigation Powers
Gives BaFin tools to pursue suspected MiCAR Title VI breaches, including information requests, summons and record access.
Customer Custody Treatment
Treats crypto-assets held for customers in crypto custody as customer property, subject to statutory exceptions.
Criminal and Fine Provisions
Adds German criminal and administrative penalties for specified unauthorized, market-abuse and MiCAR/KMAG breach conduct.
Timeline
MiCAR enters into force
EU MiCAR entered into force after publication in the Official Journal on June 9, 2023.
KMAG general commencement date
Article 1 of FinmadiG set KMAG’s general commencement at July 1, 2024, subject to later exceptions.
Bundestag adopts FinmadiG
The Bundestag adopted the Financial Market Digitalisation Act, which created KMAG.
FinmadiG published
FinmadiG and KMAG were published in the Federal Law Gazette as BGBl. 2024 I No. 438.
Main MiCAR-aligned provisions apply
Further KMAG provisions tied to CASPs, DORA and market infrastructure took effect.
German transition window ends
Certain legacy German crypto permissions could continue no later than Dec. 31, 2025.
BRUBEG amendment published
Current consolidated text reflects later amendments, including BGBl. 2026 I No. 81.
Who it affects
Actors
Crypto-asset service providers, Custodians, Exchanges, Token issuers, Trading platforms
Asset classes
Asset-referenced tokens, Crypto assets, E-money tokens
Official sources
Editorial note
As of June 3, 2026, this profile reflects KMAG as in force and notes the KMAnzV notification ordinance scheduled to apply from July 1, 2026.