Belgian bank KBC will launch Bitcoin and Ether trading for retail investors via its Bolero platform as Belgium’s MiCA regime comes into force.
KBC, one of Belgium’s largest banks, is set to roll out Bitcoin and Ether trading to retail investors next month via its own custodial solution and investment platform.
From Feb. 16, KBC customers will be able to buy and sell crypto assets through the online investment platform Bolero, the bank Thursday.
“This will enable self-directed investors in Belgium to invest in cryptocurrencies within a secure and fully regulated environment, a first in Belgium,” KBC said.
Launched in compliance with the European Union’s , KBC’s crypto trading will operate on the bank’s proprietary custodial architecture, the announcement said.
KBC claims MiCA compliance, but Belgium has issued no licenses yet
KBC said it would be the first Belgian bank to meet MiCA requirements, and has submitted a full crypto asset service provider (CASP) notification to the competent authority to offer crypto trading services.
“By offering the opportunity to purchase and sell crypto within a regulated framework, we are making innovation concrete and accessible,” KBC Group’s chief innovation officer Erik Luts said.

KBC to offer Bitcoin () and Ether () trading via Bolero in July 2025, pending regulatory approval that was expected by the end of the year.
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The bank did not specify which authority it had coordinated with, but Belgian authorities have not issued any MiCA licenses yet, to the public register maintained by the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA).
Belgium’s MiCA framework has just come into effect
While the MiCA framework entered into full force in late 2025, Belgium had not adopted national laws implementing MiCA until recently. The member state published its implementing law in December 2025, with MiCA becoming legally effective in Belgium on Jan. 3, 2026, to the Belgian Official Gazette.
The law officially designated two Belgian authorities for crypto asset market oversight, the Financial Services and Markets Authority (FSMA) and the National Bank of Belgium (NBB).

Belgium’s delayed MiCA implementation comes amid ongoing debate over whether the EU should grant centralized supervisory authority to ESMA as well as allow MiCA licenses issued in one member state to be .
Some EU member states, such as to give ESMA direct oversight of major crypto firms, arguing that fragmented oversight could threaten the bloc’s financial sovereignty.
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As a critic of passporting, France has even raised the possibility of , warning some companies may seek approvals in jurisdictions with more lenient standards.
Others, particularly Malta, have , warning it could potentially hinder competitiveness and innovation.
Cointelegraph reached out to KBC for comment but had not received a response at the time of publication.
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