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Breaking news:Google Blocks Non-Custodial Crypto Wallets from Play Store in Major Regulatory Shift

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Google Play Store has enforced new licensing rules for crypto wallet apps in 15 countries, including the U.S. and EU. The updated policy mandates wallet developers to secure licenses such as a FinCEN MSB in the U.S. or MiCA in the EU. The change affects custodial and non-custodial wallets equally, causing significant concern among software developers.

Google Play now requires U.S.-based wallet developers to register as a Money Services Business with FinCEN. They must also be licensed as a money transmitter at the state level or operate as a bank. This standard applies to all wallets that hold user funds.

Under this new enforcement, developers offering non-custodial software face the same obligations as custodial platforms. FinCEN’s own 2019 guidance excluded non-custodial wallets from MSB requirements, but Google’s policy contradicts this by imposing licensing burdens that many developers cannot meet.

These obligations also bring AML and KYC mandates to wallet apps without custody functionality. The additional compliance costs could drive independent non-custodial projects off the platform. This would reduce available crypto tools and limit options for Android users seeking self-custody.

In the European Union, Google Play will only list wallets developed by MiCA-licensed Crypto Asset Service Providers. MiCA currently defines such entities as exchanges or custodial platforms with active roles in asset custody. Non-custodial software wallets fall outside this definition and therefore cannot qualify for licensing.

Under MiCA rules, simple wallets without custodial features cannot receive approval. The policy practically blocks them from accessing the Play Store in the EU region. This restricts publishing rights to licensed firms or financial institutions operating within the CASP framework.

Although MiCA targets custodial operations, Google applies it to all crypto wallet developers. Therefore, non-custodial projects must exit the Play Store or shift under custodial entities. This marks a significant loss for open-source and privacy-centric crypto software.

The decision appears tied to FATF’s 2021 risk-based recommendations for virtual assets and service providers. While FATF cannot enforce laws, its members implement these guidelines to avoid global penalties. Google’s policy reflects this trend by adopting broad interpretations of control in crypto apps.

FATF guidelines claim that even decentralized apps may fall under regulation if a central party influences the interface. Based on this logic, non-custodial developers are now considered financial intermediaries. Thus, they must adhere to compliance rules built for banks and custodial exchanges.

Google’s move transforms private platform policies into de facto regulatory enforcement tools. It reshapes crypto access not through law, but through commercial control of app distribution. The impact may be long-term exclusion of independent crypto wallets from Android’s software ecosystem.

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