OKX gains Malta PI license enabling EU stablecoin payments under MiCA/PSD2
OKX has secured a European payments institution (PI) license in Malta to expand its stablecoin payments offering, as reported by BanklessTimes (https://www.banklesstimes.com/articles/2026/02/16/okx-secures-eu-payments-institution-license-to-expand-stablecoin-services/). The authorization is issued by the Malta Financial Services Authority and is focused on payments functionality, which is distinct from trading approvals under separate regimes.
According to CoinCentral (https://coincentral.com/okx-expands-european-footprint-with-malta-payment-license-for-stablecoin-services/), the new status is framed to support EU stablecoin payments in alignment with the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) and the Revised Payment Services Directive (PSD2). The move also lays groundwork for payment tools, including wallet-based and card-linked services, to operate under established EU rules.
Availability of OKX Pay and Card across EU: scope and timing
Availability will center on two consumer-facing channels: OKX Pay and the OKX Card. The material referenced does not include a public country-by-country schedule, so immediate, universal availability across the EU should not be assumed until local requirements are addressed.
Company leadership has presented the authorization as a compliance-first foundation for payments and card services in Europe. “The PI licence ensures that these products operate on a fully compliant footing,” said Erald Ghoos, CEO of OKX Europe, as reported by Cointelegraph (https://cointelegraph.com/news/okx-secures-eu-payment-license-to-expand-stablecoin-services).
MiCA and PSD2: consumer protections and March 2026 compliance timeline
Key consumer protections and operational standards will be shaped by MiCA for digital-asset services and PSD2 for payment institutions, with EU requirements taking effect in March 2026, according to CoinDesk (https://www.coindesk.com/policy/2026/02/16/okx-snags-european-payments-license-for-stablecoin-and-crypto-card-expansion). Ahead of that date, market participants are aligning systems, disclosures, and controls so that stablecoin transactions and card usage occur under harmonized EU rules.
Supervision and enforcement remain central. Malta’s Financial Intelligence Analysis Unit fined the group’s Europe arm €1.1 million in April 2025 for AML control failures from 2023, noting improvements but stressing the seriousness of past breaches, according to the Malta Financial Intelligence Analysis Unit.
Observers have also questioned whether Malta’s rapid licensing track is matched by supervisory capacity. Policy voices cited by blockchain.news cautioned that fast approvals can invite regulatory arbitrage if oversight standards vary across member states (https://blockchain.news/flashnews/malta-s-fast-track-mica-licensing-for-okx-crypto-com-sparks-eu-regulatory-arbitrage-concerns).
At the time of this writing, OKB is shown at $78.57 with a “Bearish” short-term sentiment, 15.26% volatility categorized as “Very High,” and a 14-day RSI of 39.80 marked “Neutral.” These figures are provided for context only and do not imply performance expectations.
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