The UK's Financial Conduct Authority published its final crypto regulatory framework, requiring all crypto firms to obtain fresh authorization by February 2027 or cease operations.
The UK's Financial Conduct Authority published its final crypto regulatory framework, requiring all crypto firms to obtain fresh authorization by February 2027 or cease operations.

The UK Financial Conduct Authority published its final crypto regulatory framework on Tuesday, requiring all crypto firms to obtain fresh authorization by Feb. 28, 2027, or face a ban on operations.
"We've created a framework that doesn't force firms to choose between regulatory certainty and room to innovate," David Geale, executive director of payments and digital finance at the FCA, said. "This regime means they can have both in a stable, competitive home to build and grow."
The licensing window opens in September 2026 and closes Feb. 28, 2027, with the regime taking full effect on Oct. 25, 2027. Crypto firms already registered under anti-money laundering rules will not have their licenses automatically converted and must reapply. The FCA reduced stablecoin capital requirements to 1% of the total value of tokens issued, down from 2% initially proposed, after industry feedback that the original level was too high.
The framework brings crypto firms under the same standards as traditional financial services in the UK, a market that finance minister Rachel Reeves said needed "clear rules of the road" to keep "dodgy actors" out. The FCA plans to consult on decentralized finance guidance and distributed ledger technology operational resilience later this year, with a further policy statement in September to establish how the regulatory perimeter applies to cryptoasset activities.
Stablecoin rules eased after industry pushback
The FCA maintained the core stablecoin framework but made several adjustments after consultations. Issuers must hold a statutory trust over reserves, offer specific withdrawal rights to users, and may hold a 5% excess in the backing asset pool. The regulator removed requirements for estimated redemption forecasts and unallocated backing fund accounts, simplifying the compliance burden.
The rules govern sterling-denominated stablecoins, which account for a small fraction of the global market. The FCA said it will consult with the Bank of England later this year on how its rules will apply to stablecoin issuers recognized as systemic by HM Treasury. Most stablecoins will fall under FCA supervision, while those deemed systemic will face a tougher regime from the Bank of England.
Benoit Marzouk, chief executive and co-founder of BCP Technologies, which issues the tGBP stablecoin, said even the lower 1% requirement remained challenging, noting that US rules were likely to adopt a flat capital requirement.
DeFi and DLT guidance on the horizon
The FCA will host a separate consultation on decentralized finance guidance and operational resilience guidelines for firms using distributed ledger technology later this year. Matthew Long, director of payments and digital assets at the FCA, said the regulator is seeking a case-by-case approach, as "true DeFi" with no identifiable person undertaking the activity will fall outside the scope of regulation.
The regulator also plans to consult on updates to the Financial Crime Guide relevant to cryptoasset firms. Pre-application support meetings for companies seeking authorization will be available starting in July, with a webinar on policy statements scheduled for July 17.
The new regime positions the UK alongside the European Union's Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation and Singapore's Payment Services Act as one of the major global frameworks for digital assets. Unlike MiCA, which takes full effect across the EU on July 1, the UK's phased approach gives firms more than a year to prepare for the October 2027 compliance deadline.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.