| 3 | Tlaib (MI) | Prohibits any digital asset issued by a company owned, affiliated, or controlled by the President or their family members from being required to be used in transactions with the government. |
| 4 | Tlaib (MI) | Prevents digital assets from being traded on any exchange or platform that controls or is controlled by a private fund. |
| 1 | Norton (DC) | Clarifies that the term State includes the District of Columbia, territories and possessions. |
| 2 | Tlaib (MI) | Strikes sections 309 and 409, which exempt certain decentralized finance activities from regulation by the SEC and CFTC. |
| 5 | Lynch (MA) | Amends the Patriot Act’s Section 314(b) (section that permits financial institutions to share information to identify and report to the federal government activities that may involve money laundering or terrorist activities) to include inquiries about cyber-enabled financial crime and fraud. |
| 6 | Lynch (MA) | Reconstitutes the Department of Justice’s National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team with the Treasury and requires the team to investigate President Trump’s crypto dealings. |
| 7 | Lynch (MA) | Requires the Inspector Generals of the Treasury and the SEC to conduct an annual report on any presidential crypto holdings. This investigation must include the President’s foreign interests, fraud or financial losses that harm Americans, and ways in which individuals are gaining influence over public decisions by owning or investing in the President’s crypto businesses. |
| 8 | Garcia (TX) | Revised Creates a clear, enforceable obligation for custodians to monitor and report illicit financing and helps to bridge the gap that the bill provides by bringing cross-border digital asset flows back under the same scrutiny that the traditional banking system must adhere to. |
| 9 | Garcia (TX) | Establishes minimum conditions to ensure the regulatory ability and integrity of blockchain systems' records. |
| 10 | McCormick (GA) | Withdrawn Clarifies that nothing in the bill overrides current financial privacy protections. |
| 11 | Sherman (CA) | Specifies that the act does not become effective until the Secretary of the Treasury certifies to Congress that digital asset transactions cannot be used to avoid paying an excise tax on remittance transfers as in Trump's reconciliation package. |
| 12 | Sherman (CA) | Requires any person or entity hosting a wallet to be compliant with KYC and AML requirements of the Bank Secrecy Act in the same manner which a bank would be compliant. |
| 13 | Sherman (CA) | Specifies that nothing in this Act prevents the SEC from regulating stocks and bonds on the blockchain as securities. |
| 14 | Sherman (CA) | Prohibits any federal government bailout of any crypto issuer or exchange. |
| 15 | Sherman (CA) | Requires the federal government to sell all crypto holdings within 60 days. |
| 16 | Sherman (CA) | Prohibits any federal campaign contributions using cryptocurrencies. |
| 17 | Sherman (CA) | Prohibits the Federal Government from purchasing cryptocurrencies. |
| 18 | Massie (KY), Perry (PA) | Prohibits the creation of a central bank digital currency (CBDC). Bars Federal Reserve banks from offering products or services directly or indirectly to individuals or entities, except specified institutions. |
| 19 | Casten (IL) | Creates an explicit International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) authority for sanctioning decentralized smart contracts. |
| 20 | Foster (IL) | Requires financial regulators to conduct a study on applications of digital identity passports in the digital asset ecosystem. The study will evaluate the standards, suitability, and other requirements for issuers and users of digital identity passports, including the technologies capability to facilitate compliance with anti-money laundering laws, reduce theft/fraud with digital assets, and to protect the privacy of their users. |
| 21 | Neguse (CO) | Bans Members of Congress, Presidents, and Vice Presidents, including candidates, from issuing or endorsing digital assets and requires any existing assets to be placed in a blind trust. |
| 22 | Casten (IL) | Creates a public-private partnership with the Treasury Department, other key agencies, and DeFi services to explore integrating anti-money laundering (AML) checks at the computer code-level and directs FinCEN to subsequently write a rule to prescribe tailored AML requirements for DeFi that meet the purposes of the Bank Secrecy Act. |
| 23 | Foster (IL), Amo (RI) | Establishes a joint "Senior Scam Hotline" within the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to provide assistance to older Americans in avoiding fraud, scams, and other abuse related to digital assets and requires information about the hotline to be displayed clearly on all Bitcoin ATMs. |
| 24 | Casten (IL) | Revised Directs FinCEN to finalize its rulemaking that classifies cryptocurrency mixer transactions in foreign jurisdictions as a “primary money laundering concern” within one year of enactment. |
| 25 | Foster (IL) | Establishes a joint "Financial Influencer Task Force" within the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to compile data on social media driven investment scams, bias, and misinformation. The task force will coordinate with other relevant regulators to provide guidance to influencers and social media companies about compliance with relevant laws regarding financial advice and investment offerings. The task force will also develop educational materials for investors regarding the risks of relying on investment advice found online. |
| 26 | Adams (NC) | Prohibits digital asset ownership and issuance by the President, Vice President, and certain family members. |
| 27 | Casten (IL) | Prohibits the SEC and CFTC from finalizing joint rulemakings required under the bill unless the agencies can meet quorum and there is representation from both political parties. |
| 28 | Casten (IL) | Directs FinCEN to issue rules to require that digital asset kiosk operators regularly update the locations of their kiosks, verify customer identities, and implement an anti-fraud policy. |
| 29 | Adams (NC) | Makes the effective date of this Act contingent on the authorization, funding, and staffing of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). |
| 30 | Waters (CA), Casar (TX), Lynch (MA), Casten (IL), Sherman (CA), Pettersen (CO), Williams (GA), Fields (LA), Meeks (NY), Gonzalez (TX), Tlaib (MI), Velázquez (NY), Foster (IL), Vargas (CA), Ramirez (IL), Friedman (CA), McGarvey (KY), Jayapal (WA), Amo (RI) | Includes the “Stop TRUMP in Crypto Act”, which blocks the President, Vice President, Members of Congress, and their immediate families from engaging in crypto corruption and conflicts of interest. |
| 31 | Waters (CA), Lynch (MA), Sherman (CA), Fields (LA), Tlaib (MI), Velázquez (NY), Foster (IL), Ramirez (IL), Jayapal (WA) | Establishes a crypto investor and consumer a “bill of rights” featuring, among other things: 24/7 customer service; insurance or SIPC-like coverage; fiduciary/best-execution rules; anti-front-running rules; bankruptcy-remote custody with 24-hour withdrawals; and monthly auditor-attested proof-of-reserves. Provides funding for the SEC and CFTC. |
| 32 | Waters (CA), Lynch (MA), Sherman (CA), Fields (LA), Tlaib (MI), Velázquez (NY), Ramirez (IL), Jayapal (WA) | Ensures that if a court finds any language in this legislation ambiguous, it will defer to the interpretation of the SEC and CFTC. |
| 33 | Waters (CA), Lynch (MA), Sherman (CA), Fields (LA), Tlaib (MI), Velázquez (NY), Foster (IL), Ramirez (IL), Jayapal (WA) | Requires covered entities under the Act to provide Federal law enforcement with digital asset or digital wallet information, if law enforcement believes the digital asset or digital wallet is involved in a ransomware attack. |
| 34 | Waters (CA), Lynch (MA), Sherman (CA), Fields (LA), Tlaib (MI), Velázquez (NY), Ramirez (IL), Jayapal (WA) | Requires all digital asset transactions to be conducted on the digital asset's related blockchain and allows the SEC and CFTC to grant exemptions if the agencies deem it appropriate. Cuts Section 203. |
| 35 | Waters (CA), Lynch (MA), Sherman (CA), Fields (LA), Tlaib (MI), Velázquez (NY), Ramirez (IL), Jayapal (WA) | Revised Prevents the preemption of all state laws and ensures that states could still go after fraud on cases that involve digital commodities and DeFi transactions. |
| 36 | Liccardo (CA), Auchincloss (MA) | Prohibits digital assets issued by the president, vice president, Members of Congress, and senior executive branch officials from trading on regulated exchanges. |
| 37 | Meeks (NY) | Confirms the authority of the President to designate certain technological entities irrespective of its ownership structure under codified sanctions authorities. |
| 38 | Liccardo (CA) | Establishes a public-private advisory committee to establish voluntary best practices and standards to reduce the risk of illicit finance and fraud on decentralized trading protocols. |
| 39 | Meeks (NY), Amo (RI) | Requires a report on digital asset technology usage to address humanitarian needs. |
| 40 | Meeks (NY) | Requires a report on the limitation of memecoins in the likeness of foreign leaders. |
| 41 | Vindman (VA) | Strengthens the crypto industry by prohibiting entities seeking registration or exemption under this Act from holding, trading, or facilitating meme-based assets associated with public officials, including the President and Vice President, when those individuals have a financial interest in the asset. Ensures that leaders work for the American people and guarantees there are no conflicts of interest for senior government officials within this digital asset regulatory framework. |
| 42 | Williams (GA) | Revised Directs the SEC and CFTC to issue joint rulemaking prohibiting gamification and also directs these agencies to issue rules requiring parental consent for minors to purchase crypto. |
| 43 | Brown (OH) | Late Encourages early reporting of misconduct, enhances accountability, and protects individuals from retaliation-particularly in high-risk areas like cybersecurity and consumer protection. Including Congress as a protected reporting channel reinforces legislative oversight and transparency. |
| 44 | Brown (OH) | Late Strengthens national security and financial integrity by ensuring BSA compliance is foundational to all digital asset financial services. |
| 45 | Brown (OH) | Late Provides clear and unified authority for the SEC and CFTC to impose civil monetary penalties for violations. |
| 46 | Brown (OH) | Late Ensures timely federal oversight and risk mitigation by requiring digital asset entities to report significant cybersecurity breaches or incidents to the SEC and CFTC within 48 hours of detection. |
| 47 | Thompson (PA), Hill (AR) | MANAGER’S AMENDMENT Late Makes typographical and technical corrections. |
| 48 | Magaziner (RI) | Late Requires the CFTC and SEC to assess fees on entities under their jurisdiction in amounts sufficient to cover the costs of implementing and enforcing the Act. |
| 49 | Peters (CA) | Late Clarifies that if a meme coin or a mining activity would be treated as an investment contract under the Howey test, the meme coin or mining activity is a security. |
| 50 | Khanna (CA) | Late Requires the Attorney General to preserve and release any records related to Jeffrey Epstein. |
| 51 | Craig (MN), Budzinski (IL), Stanton (AZ) | Late Adds digital commodities to Section 22 (Private Right of Action) of the Commodity Exchange Act. |