The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority just went from sending warning letters to kicking down doors. On April 22, the FCA raided eight locations across London suspected of running illegal peer-to-peer crypto trading operations. It was the regulator’s first ever physical enforcement action targeting the P2P crypto sector.
Officers from the FCA, HM Revenue & Customs, and the South West Regional Organised Crime Unit carried out coordinated inspections at all eight sites. They issued cease-and-desist orders at every location and seized evidence that is now feeding into multiple criminal investigations.
The message from the FCA was blunt. Every single P2P crypto trader operating in the UK right now is doing so illegally. And the regulator just proved it is willing to show up in person to shut them down.
What Happened During the UK FCA Crypto Raids?
The operation took place on Tuesday morning across multiple London premises. FCA officers worked alongside HMRC tax investigators and detectives from the South West Regional Organised Crime Unit. At each site, officers inspected records, systems, and transaction logs. They issued cease-and-desist letters ordering traders to stop all activity immediately.
The raids were carried out under the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds Regulations 2017. That means the FCA is treating these operations as potential money laundering channels, not just regulatory violations.
“Unregistered peer-to-peer crypto traders operating in the UK are doing so illegally and pose a financial crime risk,” said Steve Smart, the FCA’s executive director of enforcement and market oversight. “We will use our powers and work with partners to disrupt them.”
Detective Inspector Ross Flay of SWROCU was equally direct: “We want to stop these traders providing a route for criminals to move, disguise, and spend illegal money.”
Is P2P Crypto Trading Legal in the UK?
This is the part that surprises most people. Under UK law, anyone facilitating peer-to-peer crypto trading must register with the FCA. P2P trading means individuals buying and selling digital assets directly with each other, bypassing a centralised exchange. It often involves cash or bank transfers, which makes it harder to trace the origin of funds.
Here is the critical detail: the FCA confirmed that zero P2P crypto traders or platforms are currently registered in the UK. Not one. That means every single person or business running a P2P crypto trading desk in the country is operating illegally.
That does not mean P2P trading itself is banned. It means you need a licence to do it, and nobody has one. The FCA has been warning about this for years. Tuesday was the first time it physically showed up to enforce it.
Why Did the FCA Act Now?
The timing is not random. The UK is building a comprehensive crypto regulatory framework that is scheduled to take effect in October 2027. The FCA launched a public consultation on the new rules on April 15, covering stablecoin issuance, trading platforms, custody, and staking. Crypto firms can begin applying for authorisation from September 2026. The consultation closes June 3.
By raiding P2P sites now, the FCA is sending a signal ahead of that licensing window: get registered or get shut down. The regulator wants the industry to understand that the transition period is not a free pass.
This is also not the FCA’s first enforcement action in crypto. The regulator previously prosecuted an individual operating an illegal network of crypto ATMs. In June 2024, it worked with the Metropolitan Police to arrest two people suspected of running an unlicensed crypto exchange. But Tuesday’s coordinated multi-site operation represents a significant escalation from those earlier, one-off actions.
What Does This Mean for UK Crypto Users?
If you have been using an unregistered P2P platform in the UK, you have no legal protection. The FCA warned that users dealing with unregistered traders cannot access the Financial Ombudsman Service or the Financial Services Compensation Scheme. If something goes wrong, if your funds are stolen, if a trade is disputed, if the platform disappears overnight, you have no recourse.
There is also a legal risk for users themselves. If the funds moving through these platforms turn out to be linked to criminal activity, users could face scrutiny from HMRC and law enforcement even if they had no knowledge of it.
The FCA urged consumers to check its online register before using any crypto service. If a firm is not listed, it is not authorised.
What Comes Next for UK Crypto Regulation in 2026?
The raids are part of a broader shift in how the UK approaches crypto. Here is the timeline for what is coming:
The FCA’s consultation on regulated crypto activities closes June 3, 2026. Final rules are expected in summer 2026. Crypto firms can begin applying for full authorisation from September 2026. The complete regulatory regime takes effect in October 2027. Separate consultations on DeFi and distributed ledger resilience rules will follow later in the year.
Until October 2027, the UK’s crypto rules focus mainly on anti-money laundering compliance and financial promotions. The Tuesday raids show that even within that limited framework, the FCA is prepared to use aggressive enforcement. Once the full licensing regime kicks in, the regulatory surface area expands dramatically to cover exchanges, custody providers, stablecoin issuers, and staking platforms.
For crypto businesses looking at the UK market, the path forward is clear. Get registered, get compliant, or get out. The FCA just demonstrated that “we’ll deal with it later” is no longer an option.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is P2P crypto trading legal in the UK in 2026?
P2P crypto trading is legal in the UK, but only if the provider is registered with the FCA under anti-money laundering regulations. Currently, no P2P crypto traders or platforms are registered, which means all active P2P operations in the UK are technically illegal.
What did the FCA do on April 22, 2026?
The FCA raided eight London premises suspected of running illegal P2P crypto trading operations. Officers issued cease-and-desist orders and seized evidence now supporting multiple criminal investigations. It was the FCA’s first physical enforcement action targeting the P2P crypto sector.
When will UK crypto regulation fully take effect?
The FCA’s full crypto regulatory framework is expected to take effect in October 2027. Crypto firms can start applying for authorisation from September 2026. A public consultation on the new rules closes on June 3, 2026.

















