Four years ago, European banks were blocking crypto transactions. In 2026, twenty of the continent’s largest financial institutions are actively building or launching crypto custody and trading services, with MiCA providing the regulatory framework that made institutional participation viable at scale.
The BlockStories table, current as of March 12, 2026, maps all twenty banks against two dimensions: custody status and trading status. The picture is more advanced than most observers expected at this stage.
Santander and BBVA lead the field, both offering retail and institutional services across both custody and trading. BBVA became the first major European bank to offer Bitcoin and Ether trading directly through its mobile app in Spain. Santander launched equivalent services through its digital subsidiary Openbank. Groupe BPCE and KBC also show full retail and institutional capability across both dimensions.
Crédit Agricole and Société Générale hold institutional custody capability with trading approvals still pending under the CASP framework. Deutsche Bank has moved from announced to active operations, providing institutional custody in partnership with Bitpanda and Taurus. Commerzbank serves corporate clients through a platform developed with Deutsche Börse’s Crypto Finance division. DZ Bank recently launched its retail trading platform for its cooperative banking network.
The remaining banks, including BNP Paribas, ING, UniCredit, Intesa Sanpaolo, CaixaBank, Rabobank, Nordea, Crédit Mutuel, La Banque Postale, Danske Bank, and ABN AMRO, show varying stages of ETP access or CASP registration in progress. None are fully inactive. All are moving.
Société Générale’s SG-FORGE unit holds MiCA license number N2025-003 covering custody, transfer, and order execution. It is also active in the Euro stablecoin market with EUR CoinVertible, now live on Ethereum, Stellar, and the XRP Ledger simultaneously. A major French bank operating a live Euro stablecoin across three blockchains is a different kind of institutional involvement than simply offering Bitcoin custody.
The most significant structural development is not any individual bank’s product launch. It is the formation of Qivalis, an Amsterdam-based joint venture bringing together ten major banks including BNP Paribas, ING, UniCredit, and KBC with the specific objective of launching a MiCA-compliant Euro stablecoin in the second half of 2026.
The strategic framing is explicit. Qivalis is designed as a regulated European alternative to USDT and USDC for on-chain payments and settlement. The consortium’s stated motivation is countering U.S. dollar dominance in the stablecoin market. Ten banks that compete with each other in traditional finance are collaborating to build shared stablecoin infrastructure because the competitive threat from dollar-denominated stablecoins is larger than their competition with each other.
Stanley Druckenmiller’s prediction covered earlier this week, that stablecoins will run global payments within 15 years, is being responded to in real time by European banks who are not waiting for that timeline to materialise before positioning for it.
MiCA’s passporting mechanism allows a crypto licence obtained in any single EU member state to be valid across all 27. That eliminates the need for individual country-by-country licensing that previously made pan-European crypto operations prohibitively expensive. A bank that obtains MiCA compliance once can serve the entire EU market from a single regulatory base.
Bitpanda’s IPO preparation covered earlier today explicitly cited its MiCA licence as a competitive moat. The bank activity in this table confirms why. The institutions that moved first on MiCA compliance are now the infrastructure partners of choice for those still catching up, as Deutsche Bank’s partnership with Bitpanda demonstrates directly.
In 2022, European banks were actively blocking customer transactions to crypto exchanges. The table as of March 2026 shows that the same institutions are now either building or actively operating crypto services for those same customers. The reversal took less than four years. Whether the remaining banks in the not yet categories accelerate through 2026 as the Qivalis stablecoin launches and MiCA compliance becomes table stakes rather than competitive advantage will define the next phase of European crypto adoption.
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