Crypto Law Profile

BaFin MiCAR Crypto-Asset Services Guidance

BaFin’s January 2025 MiCAR guidance explains Germany’s approach to crypto-asset services, CASP authorisation, Article 60 notification and domestic-scope questions.

Germany Effective Agency guidance Jan 3, 2025

At a glance

Instrument BaFin guidance note explaining crypto-asset services under MiCAR for Germany.
Status Published Jan. 3, 2025; used as BaFin supervisory interpretation.
Core Scope Covers custody, trading platforms, exchanges, order services, advice, portfolio management and transfers.
Transition Germany selected a 12-month Article 143 grandfathering period for pre-MiCAR CASPs.

Overview

BaFin MiCAR Crypto-Asset Services Guidance is a German supervisory guidance profile covering BaFin’s January 2025 Merkblatt – Hinweise zu den Kryptowerte-Dienstleistungen nach MiCAR. The guidance is not a statute, but it is a key reference for how Germany’s Federal Financial Supervisory Authority describes crypto-asset services, authorisation, notification and territorial-scope questions under Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation.

As of July 2, 2026, the guidance should be read together with MiCAR itself, Germany’s Crypto Markets Supervision Act (KMAG), BaFin’s crypto-asset services authorisation materials and ESMA’s MiCA register materials. MiCAR’s CASP authorisation and supervision rules have applied since December 30, 2024, while Germany selected a shortened Article 143 transitional period for pre-MiCAR providers.

BaFin MiCAR guidance scope

The guidance identifies the MiCAR services that may bring a provider within the German authorisation perimeter. These include custody and administration of crypto-assets for clients, operation of a trading platform, exchange of crypto-assets for funds or other crypto-assets, execution of orders, placing, reception and transmission of orders, advice, portfolio management and transfer services. BaFin also explains how its MiCAR analysis connects with existing German supervisory concepts under the Banking Act, Securities Institutions Act and related administrative practice.

The profile is therefore most relevant to exchanges, brokers, custodians, transfer-service providers, trading platforms, portfolio managers, advisers and regulated financial institutions considering whether a MiCAR authorisation or notification path is available in Germany. It is also relevant to issuers and platforms that need to distinguish crypto-asset services from token issuance, white paper and market-abuse obligations elsewhere in MiCAR.

Authorisation, notification and German nexus

BaFin’s guidance explains when a crypto-asset service provider may need authorisation under MiCAR Article 59 and when an already regulated financial entity may rely on an Article 60 notification route for specified crypto-asset services. The guidance also addresses who can hold an authorisation, including legal persons and certain other undertakings where the legal form gives comparable protection for third-party interests and equivalent prudential oversight.

For cross-border models, the guidance is especially important because BaFin describes when services are considered to be provided in Germany. The analysis follows BaFin’s wider domestic-connection practice: a German nexus can arise where services are operated from Germany, through a German branch or physical presence, or where a foreign provider actively targets customers with a registered office or habitual residence in Germany. BaFin recognises a passive-service exception where the service is provided on the customer’s own initiative.

Relationship to MiCAR and KMAG

MiCAR is the binding EU regulation. It creates the authorisation and operating framework for crypto-asset service providers and also regulates public offers, admission to trading, issuer disclosures, custody, consumer protection and market abuse. The German KMAG supplements MiCAR at national level by allocating supervisory powers and enforcement tools to BaFin.

BaFin’s guidance should therefore be treated as an interpretation and supervisory-practice document. It does not replace the directly applicable MiCAR text, technical standards, ESMA guidelines, EBA materials or German implementing provisions. Where the guidance references existing BaFin notices, those cross-references help readers understand how BaFin may analogise MiCAR services to familiar investment-services or financial-services concepts.

Status and timeline

MiCAR entered into force on June 29, 2023. Its rules for asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens began applying on June 30, 2024. The CASP authorisation and ongoing-supervision provisions began applying on December 30, 2024. BaFin published its crypto-asset services guidance on January 3, 2025, shortly after the CASP regime became applicable.

ESMA’s transitional-materials page describes Article 143 measures, including grandfathering and simplified authorisation for providers already operating under national law before December 30, 2024. ESMA’s published list shows Germany with a 12-month grandfathering period, shorter than the 18-month maximum. As of July 2, 2026, editors should verify any provider-specific transitional claim against BaFin’s authorisation status, the ESMA interim MiCA register and the relevant German files.

Editorial caution

This profile is a legal-reference summary only. It does not advise any person or firm on whether a specific activity is licensable, exempt, passported, grandfathered or notifiable. Any applied perimeter analysis depends on the provider’s services, customer location, legal form, marketing, custody structure, order flow, token type and regulatory history.

Key provisions

Crypto-Asset Service Categories

Explains MiCAR service categories, including custody, trading platforms, exchange, placing, order handling, advice, portfolio management and transfer services.

Service scope Jan 3, 2025 Source

CASP Authorisation Requirement

States BaFin’s view that commercially provided crypto-asset services with a German nexus fall under MiCAR authorisation unless a MiCAR exemption or Article 60 notification applies.

Authorisation Jan 3, 2025 Source

Eligible Licence Holders

Explains that legal persons and certain other undertakings may hold MiCAR authorisations where their legal form provides comparable third-party protection and prudential oversight.

Authorisation Jan 3, 2025 Source

Article 60 Notification Route

Addresses the MiCAR notification route for already regulated financial entities before first providing covered crypto-asset services.

Notification Jan 3, 2025 Source

German Nexus and Reverse Solicitation

Applies BaFin’s domestic-connection approach to services operated from Germany or actively targeting persons in Germany, with a passive-service exception.

Perimeter Jan 3, 2025 Source

German Article 143 Transition Period

ESMA lists Germany as selecting a 12-month MiCAR Article 143 grandfathering period for CASPs operating lawfully before Dec. 30, 2024.

Transition Dec 30, 2024 Source

Timeline

  1. MiCAR entered into force

    Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 entered into force after publication in the EU Official Journal.

    In force Source
  2. ART and EMT rules began applying

    MiCAR Title III and Title IV rules for asset-referenced and e-money tokens began applying.

    Partially effective Source
  3. CASP rules began applying

    MiCAR Title V authorisation and ongoing-supervision rules for CASPs began applying.

    In force Source
  4. BaFin guidance published

    BaFin published its guidance note on crypto-asset services under MiCAR.

    Enacted Source

Who it affects

Actors

BaFin, Deutsche Bundesbank, ESMA

Asset classes

Asset-referenced tokens, Crypto assets, E-money tokens

Official sources

Editorial note

Interpretive supervisory guidance, not standalone legislation. Read with Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, Germany’s KMAG, BaFin authorisation materials, ESMA guidance and applicable technical standards.