The register-verified identifiers.
A licence number is only useful if it is tied to the exact legal entity that serves you. For eToro’s EU users that entity is eToro (Europe) Ltd — a Cyprus company, regulated by the Cypriot competent authority, passporting outward across the single market. Match every field below when you check a register.
| Field | Value to match |
|---|---|
| Legal entity | eToro (Europe) Ltd (Limassol, Cyprus) |
| Cyprus Company No. | HE 200585 |
| Competent authority | Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) |
| CySEC licence | 109/10 — authorised as a Cyprus Investment Firm (CIF) |
| MiCA crypto services | CySEC MiCA permit for eToro (Europe) Ltd, announced 19 February 2025; passportable across the EU/EEA subject to notification |
| Cross-check | ESMA register of authorised CASPs + CySEC’s own register |
eToro (Europe) Ltd (Cyprus Company No. HE 200585) is authorised and regulated by CySEC as a Cyprus Investment Firm under licence number 109/10. That is the investment-firm authorisation; it is the identifier most account terms and disclaimers cite.
Separately, eToro announced on 19 February 2025 that eToro (Europe) Ltd had been granted a permit by CySEC to provide crypto services across the EU under MiCA, subject to submitting the relevant notification to member states. A MiCA authorisation is passportable across the EU/EEA — the standard freedom-of-services route by which one national authorisation reaches the single market.
The authoritative, EU-wide record for the crypto-asset services is the ESMA register of authorised CASPs, cross-checked against CySEC’s own published records — the confirmation that an authorisation is recorded by a competent authority, not only asserted in a press release.
eToro (Europe) Ltd is authorised by CySEC as a Cyprus Investment Firm under licence 109/10 (Cyprus Company No. HE 200585). eToro announced its CySEC MiCA permit for the same entity on 19 February 2025. Always confirm the current, authoritative entries on the ESMA register of authorised CASPs and on CySEC’s own register before you rely on them.
CySEC 109/10 and the MiCA permit are two separate authorisations.
A common point of confusion in the “cysec eToro (Europe) Ltd 109/10” lookup is treating the investment-firm licence and the MiCA crypto permit as one thing. They are related but distinct, and it matters which one a given service rests on.
| Authorisation | What it is | Where to verify |
|---|---|---|
| CySEC licence 109/10 | eToro (Europe) Ltd’s authorisation as a Cyprus Investment Firm (CIF), regulated by CySEC. | CySEC’s public register of regulated entities. |
| MiCA CASP permit | The separate permit for crypto-asset services under MiCA, granted to the same entity and announced 19 February 2025. | ESMA register of authorised CASPs (cross-check CySEC). |
This is general information, not legal, financial, or investment advice, and not a determination of any firm’s authorisation status. Confirm the current entries for eToro (Europe) Ltd on the ESMA register and CySEC’s register, and read the provider’s own service notices for your market.
How to verify the entity yourself.
The same check works for any provider — match the entity, not just the brand, then confirm it on the authoritative register.
Confirm the specific entity named in your account terms — eToro (Europe) Ltd (Cyprus Company No. HE 200585, CySEC licence 109/10). A brand can run several legal entities (eToro alone operates separate UK, Australian, Seychelles and Abu Dhabi companies); only the Cyprus entity holds the EU authorisations here.
Look up eToro (Europe) Ltd on CySEC’s register of regulated entities (for licence 109/10) and on ESMA’s register of authorised CASPs (for the MiCA crypto-asset services). If the entity is listed, that is the authoritative confirmation.
Authorised providers publish listing, delisting, and country-availability notices, plus per-market risk warnings. These tell you what changes for your assets and country, which a register alone does not.
If you market a crypto service into the EU, this cuts the other way.
The flip side of users matching an entity to a licence number is that every authorised provider’s marketing is now held to the MiCA standard. Under Article 88, every customer-facing message must be clear, fair, and not misleading — and claims about your own authorisation, licence number, available markets, or supported assets are exactly the statements that have to be accurate. The routes below show how to check a live asset before it ships.
| If you are… | The immediate move | Start here |
|---|---|---|
| Unsure whether a live asset still passes A banner, landing page, or authorisation claim running into the EU. |
Paste the copy or URL and get a verdict against the MiCA marketing rules in seconds. | Free MiCA check → |
| Shipping assets across several EU markets Ongoing campaigns, multiple languages. |
Self-serve the full MiCA, FCA, and GDPR Pro rule packs and audit every asset before it ships. | Self-Audit Suite → |
| Facing a whole asset-set review or a market change A licence change, a migration, or a high-stakes launch. |
A signed, whole-asset-set review across your EU markets against MiCA, FCA, and GDPR in five business days. | Launch Audit → |
Frequently asked questions.
What is eToro (Europe) Ltd's CySEC licence number?
eToro's EU crypto and investment services are provided by eToro (Europe) Ltd (Limassol, Cyprus; Cyprus Company No. HE 200585), which is authorised and regulated by the Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) as a Cyprus Investment Firm under licence number 109/10. That entity name, company number and licence number are the identifiers to match when you look the firm up on a register. This is general information, not legal, financial, or investment advice.
Is eToro (Europe) Ltd authorised under MiCA in the EU?
On the public record, yes. eToro announced on 19 February 2025 that eToro (Europe) Ltd had been granted a permit by CySEC to provide crypto services across the EU under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), subject to submitting the relevant notification to member states. A MiCA authorisation is passportable across the EU/EEA. Confirm the current entry for eToro (Europe) Ltd directly on the ESMA register of authorised CASPs and on CySEC's own records. This is general information, not a determination of the firm's status.
How do I look up eToro (Europe) Ltd on the CySEC and ESMA registers?
Search for the legal entity eToro (Europe) Ltd — not just the eToro brand — using Cyprus Company No. HE 200585 and CySEC licence number 109/10 on CySEC's public register of regulated entities, and look up the same entity on ESMA's register of authorised CASPs for its MiCA crypto-asset services. Matching the specific entity and number is how you confirm an authorisation is recorded by a competent authority rather than only asserted in marketing. This is general information, not legal advice.
Is CySEC licence 109/10 the same as eToro's MiCA authorisation?
No — they are separate. Licence 109/10 is eToro (Europe) Ltd's authorisation as a Cyprus Investment Firm (CIF) regulated by CySEC. eToro's MiCA crypto-asset services rest on the separate MiCA permit CySEC granted to the same entity, announced on 19 February 2025 and recorded on ESMA's register of authorised CASPs. When you verify, match eToro (Europe) Ltd on both the CySEC register and the ESMA CASP register. This is general information, not legal, financial, or investment advice.
Related rules.
-
The availability-focused companion to this entity page: what the CySEC MiCA permit does and does not cover, and what can still change for your account.
-
The maintained, sourced view of which crypto exchanges are authorised, restricted, or withdrawn in the EU under MiCA — eToro (Europe) Ltd included, with the ESMA register cross-check.
-
The general status page: what the end of the transitional period changed, and what it means if a provider is not authorised.
-
MiCA, FCA, SEC, GDPR — the marketing rules, quoted and explained.
This page is general, educational information for EU users and marketing teams, not legal, financial, or investment advice, and not a determination of any firm’s authorisation status or any authority’s intentions. The facts stated — eToro (Europe) Ltd’s Cyprus Company No. HE 200585, its CySEC Cyprus Investment Firm licence 109/10, and eToro’s 19 February 2025 announcement of a CySEC MiCA permit for the same entity — are drawn from public records and a company announcement at a point in time and can change. Confirm the current entries on the ESMA register of authorised CASPs and CySEC’s own register, read the provider’s own service notices and risk warnings, and consult qualified counsel for your situation. As of 16 July 2026.