OKX secured a Malta cost establishment license to assist EU-compliant stablecoin providers, together with OKX Pay and the OKX Card.
Cryptocurrency exchange OKX expanded its regulatory footprint in Europe, securing a license for stablecoin payments.
OKX has obtained a Payment Institution (PI) license in Malta, the company told Cointelegraph on Monday. The authorization is issued under the European Union’s payments framework and is designed to bring OKX’s payment products into line with requirements under the bloc’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) and the Second Payment Services Directive (PSD2).
Under these rules, crypto-asset service providers (CASPs) offering payment services involving stablecoins must hold either a PI or Electronic Money Institution (EMI) authorization. OKX’s PI license comes more than a year after the exchange received a MiCA license from the Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA) in January 2025.
“Securing a Payment Institution license ensures that these products operate on a fully compliant footing,” OKX Europe CEO Erald Ghoos said, adding:
“Europe has chosen clarity over ambiguity when it comes to digital asset regulation […] Stablecoins can meaningfully modernize cash, bettering cross-border effectivity and lowering friction in funds, however provided that constructed inside sturdy regulatory guardrails.”
License helps OKX Pay and OKX Card rollout
The trade mentioned the license will cowl merchandise together with OKX Pay and the OKX Card, which permit customers to spend crypto property and stablecoins.
Formally launched in late January, OKX Card helps spending in stablecoins equivalent to Circle’s USDC (USDC) and the Paxos-issued World Greenback (USDG).

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