The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority carried out its first coordinated crackdown on illegal peer-to-peer crypto trading on April 22, 2026, targeting eight premises across London and issuing cease-and-desist notices at every site.
The FCA’s first street-level crypto sweep
The operation brought together three agencies: the FCA, HM Revenue & Customs, and the South West Regional Organised Crime Unit. Together they swept eight London locations suspected of running unlicensed peer-to-peer crypto trading operations.
This was not a routine warning letter. The FCA described the action as its first operation specifically designed to disrupt illegal peer-to-peer crypto trading, marking a shift from desk-based enforcement to street-level intervention.
The regulator said evidence collected during the on-site inspections is now supporting a number of ongoing criminal investigations, though no arrests or charges have been publicly disclosed in connection with this specific operation.
Why illegal P2P desks were in the crosshairs
Peer-to-peer crypto trading, sometimes called over-the-counter or OTC dealing, involves direct exchanges of cryptocurrency for cash or bank transfers without going through a registered platform. In the UK, anyone facilitating such transactions commercially must be registered with the FCA under the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations 2017.
The FCA made a striking disclosure: there are currently zero FCA-registered peer-to-peer crypto traders or platforms operating in the UK. That means every commercial P2P crypto operation in the country is, by the regulator’s definition, unregistered.
The regulator did not publicly identify the eight targeted premises or the individuals behind them. The framing focused on money-laundering risk, positioning informal crypto desks as potential conduits for illicit finance rather than treating them as harmless grey-market services.
What the raids signal before the UK’s new crypto regime
The timing matters. The FCA’s upcoming crypto permissions regime opens its application window on September 30, 2026, with applications accepted through February 28, 2027. The broader regulatory framework is expected to come into force on October 25, 2027, bringing crypto activity under the Financial Services and Markets Act for the first time.
AMLBot CEO Slav Demchuk framed the shift bluntly, telling Cointelegraph that under the incoming regime, unregistered OTC desks would no longer represent an AML-registration gap but would instead constitute unauthorized regulated activity.
“Unregistered OTC desks are no longer an AML-registration gap, they’re an unauthorised regulated activity.”
— Slav Demchuk, CEO of AMLBot
The April raids look like an early warning shot. Before the full rulebook arrives, the FCA is demonstrating that it can and will physically intervene against operators who skip registration, even under the current, narrower anti-money-laundering framework. The approach echoes the regulatory momentum building globally, with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent pushing for a crypto market structure bill on the other side of the Atlantic.
The crackdown lands during a cautious stretch for crypto markets. Bitcoin traded near $77,701, down roughly 0.7% over 24 hours, while the Crypto Fear and Greed Index sat at 46, in “Fear” territory.
For UK-based P2P traders, the message is direct. The FCA is not waiting for the 2027 regime to act. Firms like Hyperscale Data, which recently added 13.2 BTC to its treasury, operate through regulated channels, while informal London desks handling cash-for-crypto swaps now face physical enforcement. Critics like Peter Schiff, who has questioned even mainstream crypto treasury strategies, would find little to defend in unregistered OTC operations. The gap between regulated and unregistered activity is narrowing fast.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.




