Key Takeaways
The enforcement notice names four entities – Phoenixfin Pte Ltd, MEK Global Limited, Peken Global Limited, and KuCoin Exchange EU GmbH — and prohibits all marketing, advertising, and solicitation tied to the KuCoin brand within Dubai. VARA also alleged that KuCoin misrepresented its licensing status to users in the jurisdiction, a charge that compounds the severity of the regulatory breach.
Under Dubai Law No. (4) of 2022 and Cabinet Resolution No. 111/2022, all virtual asset service providers must hold a valid VARA license to operate. KuCoin held none.
The action fits a broader enforcement pattern that has been accelerating across the UAE. In 2025, VARA sanctioned 19 firms for similar unlicensed operations, with fines ranging from AED 100,000 to AED 600,000. The stakes have since risen sharply. Federal Decree No. 6 of 2025 introduced tougher penalties for unlicensed financial activity, including potential imprisonment and fines reaching 500 million dirhams.
For Dubai-based KuCoin users, the consequences are immediate and carry real risk. All unlicensed trading, deposit activity, and platform use must stop. More significantly, because KuCoin never secured VARA approval, local users have no access to the investor protections or dispute resolution mechanisms available to customers of licensed exchanges such as Binance or Coinbase. VARA has explicitly warned that continued use of the platform exposes residents to financial loss and possible legal liability.
KuCoin issued a brief statement in response, with a spokesperson saying the exchange “respects applicable laws and regulatory processes globally” and would pursue a “cooperative approach with regulators.” The exchange did not confirm whether it plans to exit the Dubai market entirely or provide a timeline for obtaining VARA licensing.
The Dubai action is not an isolated incident. KuCoin is currently managing regulatory fallout across multiple jurisdictions. In January 2025, the exchange pleaded guilty to anti-money laundering violations in the United States, paid $297 million in penalties, and agreed to withdraw from the U.S. market for a minimum of two years. By September 2025, Canadian regulator FINTRAC had levied a C$19.6 million fine against the platform for registration failures. Most recently, in February 2026, Austria’s Financial Market Authority barred KuCoin EU from taking on new customers, citing inadequate compliance staffing.
Since January 2025, KuCoin has operated under new CEO BC Wong, the exchange’s former Chief Legal Officer, who has publicly framed the company’s direction as “compliance-first.” The mounting global restrictions suggest that pivot has yet to translate into results.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
The post Dubai Regulator Orders KuCoin to Halt All Operations, Cites Unlicensed Activity appeared first on Coindoo.


