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FCA Joint Operation Targets 8 London Premises in First Crackdown on Illegal Peer-to-Peer Crypto Trading

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Summary

The FCA led a joint operation with HMRC and SWROCU on 22 April 2026, executing simultaneous on-site inspections at 8 London premises suspected of illegal peer-to-peer crypto trading. Cease and desist letters were issued at each location requiring traders to halt illegal activity immediately. Evidence gathered from the inspections is supporting multiple ongoing criminal investigations. The operation builds on prior FCA action, including the June 2024 arrest of 2 individuals suspected of running an illegal cryptoasset exchange in conjunction with the Metropolitan Police Service. There are currently no FCA-registered peer-to-peer crypto traders or platforms operating in the UK.

“Unregistered peer-to-peer crypto traders operating in the UK are doing so illegally and pose a financial crime risk.”

FCA , verbatim from source
Why this matters

Firms facilitating peer-to-peer crypto transactions should immediately verify their registration status with the FCA. The joint operation with HMRC and SWROCU demonstrates inter-agency coordination on crypto AML enforcement, and any entity without appropriate registration faces cease and desist action plus potential criminal referral. The FCA has now prosecuted illegal crypto ATM networks and cryptoasset exchanges in addition to this peer-to-peer trading operation, indicating a broadening enforcement posture.

AI-drafted from the source document, validated against GovPing's analyst note standards . For the primary regulatory language, read the source document .
Published by FCA on fca.org.uk . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

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What changed

The FCA has completed its first coordinated multi-agency operation specifically targeting illegal peer-to-peer crypto trading, issuing formal cease and desist letters at 8 London premises. The action was taken under the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations 2017 and involves joint working with HMRC and SWROCU, with evidence referred for criminal investigation.

Peer-to-peer crypto traders and platforms that are not registered with the FCA should treat this as a clear enforcement signal: the FCA has demonstrated willingness to use its powers alongside law enforcement partners to disrupt unregistered activity. Any entity facilitating peer-to-peer crypto transactions in the UK without appropriate FCA registration is operating illegally and faces active disruption. Consumers should verify any crypto firm through the FCA's Firm Checker before engaging.

What to do next

  1. Cease and desist letters were issued at each of the 8 premises, notifying traders to stop illegal activity immediately.

Archived snapshot

Apr 23, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

FCA leads first crackdown on illegal crypto trading

Press Releases First published:

22/04/2026

Last updated: 22/04/2026
The FCA has carried out its first operation with partners to disrupt illegal peer-to-peer crypto trading across multiple London locations.


Working with HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) and the South West Regional Organised Crime Unit (SWROCU), the FCA targeted 8 premises suspected of illegal peer-to-peer crypto trading. The FCA issued cease and desist letters at each site, notifying traders to stop illegal activity immediately. Evidence obtained during the on-site inspections is supporting a number of ongoing criminal investigations.

Peer-to-peer trading is when individuals buy and sell crypto directly with each other, rather than using a centralised exchange and requires appropriate registration. There are currently no FCA registered peer-to-peer crypto traders or platforms operating in the UK.

Steve Smart, executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the FCA, said: 'Unregistered peer-to-peer crypto traders operating in the UK are doing so illegally and pose a financial crime risk. We will use our powers and work with partners to disrupt them.

'Consumers should protect themselves by only dealing with firms registered with the FCA and by remembering that crypto remains a high risk investment.'

DI Ross Flay of SWROCU said: 'By working with our colleagues at the FCA and HMRC we are able to effectively target and disrupt unregistered peer-to-peer crypto traders operating illegally. As law enforcement, we want to stop these traders providing a route for criminals to move, disguise and spend illegal money.'

The FCA has previously taken action against unregistered cryptoasset activity in the UK, including prosecuting an individual operating an illegal network of crypto ATMs. In June 2024, the FCA worked with the Metropolitan Police Service to arrest 2 individuals suspected of running an illegal cryptoasset exchange.

The Government’s National Risk Assessment of Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing outlines how cryptoassets are increasingly used to launder the proceeds of crime. The FCA continues to work with domestic and international partners to fight financial crime and protect consumers.

Consumers can check whether a crypto firm is correctly registered with the FCA using the FCA’s Firm Checker.

Notes to editors

  1. Action was taken under the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations 2017.
  2. Crypto is a high-risk investment and remains largely unregulated in the UK, except for anti-money laundering and financial promotion.
  3. Use the FCA’s Firm Checker to check a firm’s permissions.
  4. The FCA enables a fair and thriving financial services market for the good of consumers and the economy. Find out more about the FCA.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
FCA
Filed
April 22nd, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Branch
Executive
Joint with
HMRC SWROCU
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Technology companies Investors Consumers
Industry sector
5239.1 Cryptocurrency & Digital Assets
Activity scope
Crypto trading Peer-to-peer transactions AML compliance
Geographic scope
United Kingdom GB

Taxonomy

Primary area
Anti-Money Laundering
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
BSA/AML
Topics
Securities Financial Services

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