The much-awaited UK crypto regulation will be finalized by 2026 and go live by October 2027. According to the Finance Minister, Rachel Reeves, the new framework would,
“Provide clear rules of the road, strengthen consumer protections, and keep dodgy actors out of the market.”
The new legislation, set to be introduced in the parliament on the 15th of December, will build on a draft proposal issued earlier this year.
According to the ministry spokesperson, the regulation has undergone only minor changes and will extend the current financial regulation to cover cryptocurrencies.
Additionally, it will align with the U.S crypto laws rather than the European Union’s MiCA (Market in Crypto Assets Regulation) guidelines.
Mapping UK crypto regulation push
In October 2023, the ministry submitted a proposal to regulate crypto assets and stablecoins. The government endorsed rules covering stablecoin issuance, crypto exchanges, and disclosure standards.
These measures were aimed at reducing market abuse.
The proposal opened a public consultation period for stakeholders until May 2025. Between May and July, regulators gathered additional feedback focused on stablecoin rules.
They also held further consultation sessions during this period.
In Q4 2025, UK regulators released draft crypto guidelines. The Bank of England and the Financial Conduct Authority led the process.
The guidelines covered stablecoins, DeFi, and other crypto segments.
As a result, it opened a window for stakeholders to submit comments on the draft proposal by May 2025. Between May and July, it also sought feedback on stablecoin rules and conducted more consultations.
Stablecoins vs DeFi rules
The UK stablecoin rules, for example, were mirrored to the U.S. GENIUS Act, but with much stricter holding caps to protect against capital flight from traditional systems.
Individuals can hold up to £20,000 per “systematic stablecoin”, while businesses can hold up to £10 million. Only 60% of reserves can earn interest from UK short-term government debt securities.
In contrast, the U.S has no holdings limits; however, interest-bearing stablecoins have been a controversial issue. Additionally, issuers can earn up to 100% on their stablecoin reserves via T-bills.
Critics, such as Aave CEO Stani Kulechov, said that the strict interest-earning potential could make Great British Pound (GBP)-based stablecoins uncompetitive.
However, other recent UK guidelines, like tax-free DeFi activities and treating Bitcoin [BTC] and other crypto assets as property, were welcomed by the industry.
In fact, Kulechov hailed the tax-free DeFi as a “win” for the growing sector.
That said, the final feedback and guidelines by the regulators are expected to be completed by H2 2026, allowing the new crypto regime to kick off in 2027.
Final Thoughts
- The UK government reaffirmed its commitment to have a clear crypto regulatory regime by 2027.
- Some of the proposals, like stablecoin caps, have been met with opposition.