Tuesday, June 30, 2026
banner

Australia’s crypto Travel Rule takes effect July 1, requiring every regulated exchange to attach sender and recipient identity details to all incoming and outgoing transfers, with no minimum threshold.

The rule arrives as Europe’s MiCA licensing deadline falls on the same day, placing Australia in the midst of a wider tightening of crypto compliance rules across major markets.

What Australia’s Travel Rule Changes for Crypto Users

The measure is the final phase of an AML/CTF overhaul that Australia passed in November 2024, with most reforms live since March. It is enforced by AUSTRAC, the country’s financial intelligence agency, and applies to transfers of any size.

The reach is wide. AUSTRAC has stepped up supervision of 27 local crypto exchanges and flags the sector as high risk for money laundering. About 31% of Australian adults held crypto in 2025, according to one industry survey.

Users will see new prompts when sending or receiving crypto. The platform will ask for the counterparty’s name and the exchange involved. Exchanges can store the details after a first submission, which should limit repeat prompts.

Follow us on X to get the latest news as it happens

Transfers to self-custodial wallets will prompt users to confirm they control the destination address. Concerns over the checks have already pushed some Bitcoin (BTC) holders toward self-custody of their coins ahead of the start date.

However, AUSTRAC has deferred formal reporting on unverified self-hosted wallets until March 2029.

Some platforms moved early. Kraken began requiring extra verification on private-wallet transfers for Australian clients on March 31.

A Coordinated July 1 Deadline for Global Crypto Rules

Australia is adopting a standard that Europe already runs. The EU’s Transfer of Funds regulation has required full sender and recipient data on crypto transfers of any size since December 2024.

July 1 also marks the end of the EU’s MiCA transition period. After that, unauthorized providers will no longer be able to serve EU clients, and Europe has issued a final MiCA deadline warning. The pressure has reshaped the market.

Coinbase opened a Luxembourg hub to secure EU-wide licensing, while exchanges restricting EU access now include Bybit and Binance.

Both regimes trace back to the FATF Travel Rule, set out in Recommendation 16. The FATF first applied the standard to crypto in June 2019, and adoption has widened since.

The thresholds reveal the divide. Australia and the EU collect data on transfers of any value. The United States, by contrast, only reports transfers from $3,000.

The shared start date shows how quickly travel rule standards are converging. The next test comes in 2029, when Australia begins reporting on unverified self-hosted wallets.

Whether tighter checks move activity into self-custody or simply normalize identity data across borders should become clearer soon.

The post Australia Follows Europe With July 1 Crypto Rule Change for All Exchange Transfers appeared first on BeInCrypto.

Regulation,Australia News,Editor’s Pick,MiCA News,Regulation News#Australia #Europe #July #Crypto #Rule #Change #Exchange #Transfers1782833021

banner
crypto & nft lover

Johnathan DoeCoin

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar.

Follow Me

Top Selling Multipurpose WP Theme

Newsletter

banner
crypto & nft lover

Johnathan DoeCoin

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar.

@2022 u2013 All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign