Four licensed exchanges launched overlapping MiCA crypto deposit bonuses campaigns within ten days in late June 2026, using incentive tools that EU financial regulators stripped from the CFD market more than seven years ago.
The timing was deliberate. On 1 July, national grandfathering arrangements for platforms without a Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP) licence expired, cutting Binance and other unlicensed operators off from onboarding new users across the European Economic Area (EEA). The licensed platforms moved quickly to compete for those displaced customers.
Four Campaigns, One Deadline
Kraken moved first. From 19 June to 31 July, every euro deposited by enrolled EEA users earns one entry into a €1 million prize draw, open to both new and existing customers on Kraken Pro and the main app.
Bybit EU launched its ‘Move Your Funds, Get Rewarded’ campaign on the same day, running to 31 July for new EEA users outside Malta. The top tier pays 3% annualised cashback on cumulative crypto deposits of $50,000 or more, paid monthly in USDC over 12 months and conditional on a minimum spot trading volume. Bybit EU GmbH received its CASP authorisation from the Austrian Financial Market Authority (FMA) on 28 May 2025, under Article 63 of Regulation (EU) 2023/1114, covering custody, exchange, placing and transfer services for crypto-assets.
OKX followed on 29 June with the largest headline figure: an 8% bonus on net deposits, capped at €20,000 and paid in USDC across 52 weeks, for EEA residents who opt in and deposit at least €10 before 31 July. New accounts can also claim a welcome bonus of up to €400 and a 30-day VIP upgrade, tied to a derivatives appropriateness assessment.
Coinbase is promoting a 5% transfer bonus for users in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Poland, Sweden and the UK, with eligibility tied to a paid Coinbase One subscription. Full terms sit behind a login wall.
Each campaign rewards customers over periods of up to a year. The mechanics differ across every MiCA crypto deposit bonus on offer, but the commercial logic is the same: move assets onto a licensed platform and collect.
Why MiCA Crypto Deposit Bonuses Are Legal When CFD Bonuses Are Not
MiCA (Regulation EU 2023/1114), adopted by the European Parliament and Council on 31 May 2023, obliges CASPs to act honestly, fairly and professionally in clients’ best interests, and requires marketing to be fair, clear and not misleading. It contains no provision banning deposit bonuses, cashback programmes, transfer rewards or prize draws for retail clients.
The contrast with the CFD market is direct. The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) introduced product intervention measures for retail CFD clients that took effect from 1 August 2018. Those measures prohibited providers from offering retail clients any monetary or non-monetary benefit for opening an account, funding one, or trading, covering account-opening bonuses, trading bonuses, volume-based rebates and gifts. Only information and research tools were exempt.
ESMA’s stated reasoning was that such incentives distract retail clients from the risks of the product and encourage more active trading. ESMA renewed and amended the decision in October 2018, and national regulators across the EU made the measures permanent in 2019 under domestic product intervention rules, where they remain today.
What the Gap Means in Practice
The asymmetry has a concrete value. A UK investor moving the equivalent of €10,000 in crypto to OKX before 31 July could, in theory, receive up to €800 in USDC over the following year (8% of €10,000, which falls well inside the €20,000 bonus cap). A CFD broker cannot legally offer anything comparable.
Every campaign carries conditions worth reading carefully: trading volume minimums, subscription fees, appropriateness assessments and caps that reduce the headline rate for most users. The headline percentages are ceilings, not guarantees.
Bybit, which plans to hire over 100 staff in Vienna to support its European operations, illustrates the scale of commitment the larger exchanges are making to the post-MiCA market. Founded in 2018 and headquartered in Dubai, it ranks as the second-largest crypto exchange by trading volume according to CoinMarketCap.
The competitive dynamic now running across the EEA faces a structural test: MiCA’s regulatory framework entered formal review in May 2026. Any future tightening of retail marketing rules could close the gap between what crypto exchanges and CFD brokers are permitted to offer, making the current bonus window time-limited in more ways than one.

