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ESMA Launches Dedicated Review Process for Crypto Custody Providers After MiCA Transition - Crypto Economy
TL;DR:
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has launched an exclusive review process to assess the maturity level and operational resilience of Crypto Custody Providers in the European Union. The initiative was introduced this Wednesday, coinciding with the recent end of the transition phase of the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, which concluded on July 1.
The regulatory body detailed that this Common Supervisory Action (CSA) will place a priority focus on the custody activities of Crypto-Asset Service Providers (CASPs). According to ESMA’s official documentation, the core objective is to measure the robustness of the digital protection framework against technological and infrastructure risks in the sector.

Risk Controls and Inspections by National Authorities
The practical execution of these inspections will not be carried out directly by the central body, but will instead fall upon the National Competent Authorities (NCAs) of each Member State. National agencies will conduct the audits using a risk-based selection from a sample of firms that already hold authorized licenses.
According to the supervisor’s schedule, the data collection and field analysis phase will remain active until the first half of 2027. During this period, regulators will examine critical infrastructure administration in detail. According to the parameters published by ESMA, the oversight will encompass private key management, transaction controls, and internal mechanisms for the rapid detection of and response to cyber incidents.
Additionally, national authorities will comprehensively assess the level of dependency crypto firms have on third-party technology providers. The ESMA report details that weaknesses in the external supply chain represent a vulnerability to financial stability; therefore, it will be verified whether the delegation of services strictly complies with the boundaries of the eurozone’s digital resilience law.
Consolidation of the Framework and Commercial Ecosystem Adaptation
The deployment of this supervision occurs in an environment where multiple platforms have begun modifying their operations to avoid administrative sanctions. Recently, institutional ecosystem firms have structured white-label infrastructure solutions dedicated to helping local exchanges outsource custody under standards compatible with the new European Union requirements.
Pressure on industry players has significantly increased due to the end of the regulatory grace period in the region. Sector reports indicate that companies that did not obtain the proper MiCA certification before the July deadline are undergoing mandatory processes for the orderly cessation of commercial activities and forced user migration.
Once the competent authorities compile the individual results of each local inspection, all information will be sent to the European agency’s headquarters. ESMA plans to consolidate the findings into a single unified final document, which will be presented to its Board of Supervisors during the second half of 2027.