Key Highlights
- KuCoin officially blocks U.S. users after a Commodity Futures Trading Commission settlement and $500K penalty.
- U.S. regulators say KuCoin failed AML controls, enabling billions in suspicious crypto transactions.
- Global pressure rises as Dubai bans KuCoin operations despite its European MiCA license approval
KuCoin’s operator, Peken Global Limited, has hit a major regulatory roadblock after a U.S. court approved a civil settlement with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). Under the agreement, the company must pay $500,000 in penalties and ensure that U.S. users can no longer access the platform.
The CFTC said Peken Global let U.S. users trade directly on its platform without registering as a foreign board of trade. The consent order bars the company from breaking the law again and notes its cooperation in related investigations, including the criminal case United States v. Flashdot Limited, et al., which involved a forfeiture order.
This CFTC settlement effectively ends a long-running U.S. investigation and acts as the final nail in the coffin following KuCoin;s January 2025 guilty plea for running an unlicensed money transmitting business, which resulted in nearly $300 million in fines and forfeitures.
U.S. Attorney Danielle R. Sassoon said, “KuCoin avoided implementing required anti-money laundering policies designed to identify criminal actors and prevent illicit transactions.” She added, “KuCoin was used to facilitate billions of dollars’ worth of suspicious transactions, including proceeds from darknet markets and malware, ransomware, and fraud schemes.”
Global regulatory pressures intensify
The fallout for KuCoin extends far beyond American borders as international regulators also tighten their grip.
In the Middle East, Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) recently ordered four KuCoin entities to cease operations. VARA stated that none of the entities hold the proper licenses to offer crypto services in Dubai and warned users of possible financial and legal risks. Consequently, the exchange is barred from promoting or selling crypto products to UAE residents.
Meanwhile, KuCoin’s European ambitions have also hit a snag. The exchange successfully obtained a Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) license in Austria last November, letting it operate regulated services across most of the European Economic Area, except Malta, giving the company a stable base in Europe. However, in February 2026, the Austrian Financial Market Authority temporarily banned KuCoin EU from onboarding new clients or offering new products after discovering that the company failed to fill mandatory AML and Sanctions Compliance leadership roles.
Impact on operations and users
The cost of historical non-compliance has been steep for KuCoin. The exchange had around 1.5 million U.S. users, generating roughly $184.5 million in fees from them. After the January 2025 guilty plea, two founders, Chun “Michael” Gan and Ke “Eric” Tang, formally stepped down from the company.
The exchange only rolled out a know-your-customer (KYC) program in August 2023, and it did not apply it to existing accounts. Market confidence has reflected these ongoing hurdles; as of writing, according to CoinMarketCap data, KuCoin Token traded at $8.08, down 0.69% in 24 hours, reflecting continued uncertainty.
Today, KuCoin faces a patchwork of regulations: banned in the U.S. and Dubai but allowed to operate under MiCA rules in Europe. These compounding developments serve as a stark reminder of the existential importance of regulatory compliance for global crypto exchanges.
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