eToro has activated crypto trading for New York residents, more than three years after the New York State Department of Financial Services granted the platform a Virtual Currency Business Activity License in February 2023.
The delay is the real headline: in a jurisdiction where fewer than 40 firms have ever secured a BitLicense, activating one is operationally harder than obtaining it, and eToro’s entry now puts it among a narrow cohort of fully licensed crypto platforms serving the country’s largest financial market.
Key Takeaways:
- License Status: eToro received its BitLicense from NYDFS in February 2023 – the first firm granted one following the FTX collapse – but did not activate crypto trading in New York until April 2026, a gap of over three years.
- Initial Asset Coverage: eToro is launching with approximately 20 tokens in New York, against the roughly 115 crypto assets it offers across its 47 other U.S. states and 74 international markets.
- U.S. Coverage: The New York rollout extends eToro’s crypto trading to 48 U.S. states, with Hawaii and Nevada remaining excluded due to separate licensing requirements.
- Staking Pipeline: eToro has confirmed staking for New York users is in the product pipeline, pending NYDFS approval of updated business plan filings.
- Competitive Context: U.S. crypto activity on eToro declined 36% year-over-year in February 2026, making New York’s compliance unlock a strategic priority rather than a volume catalyst – at least near-term.
- What to Watch: Token expansion beyond the initial 20 and NYDFS sign-off on staking are the two near-term variables that will determine how competitive eToro’s New York offering actually becomes.
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What the BitLicense Actually Covers – and Why eToro’s Three-Year Gap Changes the Narrative
The New York State Department of Financial Services introduced the BitLicense framework in June 2015 under 23 NYCRR Part 200, creating the most demanding state-level crypto licensing regime in the U.S.
The license authorizes firms to custody, transmit, and trade virtual currencies for New York residents – but it requires a separate legal entity, continuous capital adequacy demonstrations, robust AML programs, and ongoing NYDFS supervisory access. In practice, the application process alone has taken multiple years for most firms.
eToro cleared that bar in February 2023, making it, according to Head of eToro U.S. Andrew McCormick, the first firm to receive a BitLicense following the FTX collapse, a period when NYDFS scrutiny intensified sharply.
McCormick said: “We were in the process, near the finish line, when that happened, and as it should, it certainly increased the scrutiny and diligence.” That framing matters because it positions eToro’s license not just as a checkbox but as a post-crisis stress test of its compliance infrastructure.
Still, receiving a license and deploying a product are different milestones. eToro also holds a Money Transmitter License in New York, enabling fiat transmission alongside virtual currency activities – a dual-license structure that adds operational complexity.
McCormick acknowledged the timeline overran internal expectations: “We were looking at maybe that year to launch.” The broader U.S. picture underlines the same pattern: eToro launched nationwide securities trading in November 2024, but New York crypto remained gated until now.
As federal stablecoin oversight frameworks continue to evolve under the GENIUS Act, New York’s state-level rigor remains the most demanding compliance layer any crypto firm faces in the U.S.
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