Crypto will be regulated in the UK
from October 2027. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is
finalising the wider cryptoasset regime, with rules to be
published this summer. Parliament has now confirmed which
cryptoasset activities will fall within the scope of
regulation.
Building on that, the FCA is
consulting on new guidance to help firms understand how they
might be affected by the regulatory regime
for cryptoassets.
The regulator is seeking feedback on
its interpretation of the following
regulated cryptoasset activities:
-
issuing qualifying stablecoin
-
operating trading platforms
-
dealing and arranging
deals in qualifying cryptoassets
-
safeguarding cryptoassets
-
staking
The proposed guidance supports the
FCA's aim for an open, sustainable and competitive crypto market
people can trust.
Crypto firms will be able
to start applying for authorisation from September
2026. Ahead of this, the FCA is providing crypto firms with
support on how to apply and to understand how the future regime
could work.
Until the new regime comes into
force, crypto is largely unregulated except for
financial promotions and financial crime purposes. As with all
high-risk investments, people should only put in what they can
afford to lose.
Notes to
Editors
-
Read the full
consultation here.
-
The consultation closes on 3 June
2026.
-
This publication marks another step
towards crypto regulation in the UK, following the making of
the statutory instrument in Parliament on 4 February 2026.
-
The FCA has set out the timeline for
crypto regulation in its crypto roadmap.
-
The FCA has consulted on stablecoin
issuance and cryptoasset custody (CP25/14), prudential rules (CP25/15 and CP25/42), the
application of the FCA Handbook (CP25/25 and CP26/4),
regulating cryptoasset activities (CP25/40), and
admissions and disclosures and market abuse (CP25/41).
-
The FCA's consultations on rules for
the future cryptoasset regime are substantively complete, with
policy statements to be published this summer. This perimeter
guidance consultation complements that work by clarifying which
activities fall within scope, with a final policy statement due
in autumn.
-
The
authorisations gateway opens on 30
September. The FCA is
hosting authorisation-focussed webinars to support prospective
applicants, with an introduction to the upcoming
regulatory changes and an intro to anti-money laundering
regulations available on demand. The next webinar, on 29
April, focuses on the
Senior Managers and Certification Regime.
-
Later this year, the FCA will
consult on decentralised finance (DeFi) guidance and
separately on operational resilience guidance for firms using
distributed ledger technology
(DLT). It will
also consult on updates to the Financial Crime Guide relevant
to cryptoasset firms.
-
Find out more
about requirements firms must comply
with.