EU Declares War on Crypto Privacy: 2027 Ban Targets Anonymous Wallets and Privacy Coins
Brace for impact—European regulators just fired a torpedo at financial anonymity. Starting 2027, the bloc will outlaw untraceable crypto transactions, killing privacy coins and anonymous accounts in one sweeping blow.
Behind the curtain: Brussels frames this as an anti-money laundering measure. Critics call it surveillance creep wrapped in bureaucratic jargon. Either way, mixers and privacy protocols like Monero just got a two-year expiration date in the EU.
Bonus irony: The same governments bailing out banks every decade now demand ’transparency’ from decentralized systems that actually work. How very... selective of them.

Crypto firms operating across multiple EU nations will face heightened scrutiny. A new supervisory body, AMLA, will begin monitoring the largest players—those serving tens of thousands of customers or moving over €50 million in transactions.
Initial oversight will target 40 major firms, with mandatory identity checks on crypto transfers above €1,000.
Although the regulatory push has drawn criticism from privacy advocates, EU policymakers argue it’s a necessary step toward cleaning up the crypto space and preventing misuse.