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UK Issues Final Crypto Rules Ahead of Firms’ 2027 FCA Deadline



The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published a crypto regulatory framework that brings the regulator’s long-awaited “crypto roadmap” to completion, setting out how digital-asset firms will be authorized and supervised in the country.


In a Tuesday press release shared with Cointelegraph, the FCA said the new regime introduces mandatory licensing for crypto firms, adds capital stress-testing requirements, strengthens rules around market manipulation and insider dealing, and adjusts the capital requirements applicable to stablecoin issuers.



Key takeaways



  • UK crypto firms will need FCA authorization to operate, including trading platforms, custodians, stablecoin issuers and staking intermediaries.

  • A licensing window runs from September through Feb. 28, 2027, with the regime set to go live Oct. 25, 2027.

  • Firms already authorized under UK money laundering regulations will not automatically be converted and must obtain new authorization.

  • Stablecoin requirements are being refined, including changes to reserve composition rules and the treatment of reserves held in certain arrangements.

  • The FCA plans additional work later this year on DeFi guidance and operational resilience for distributed ledger technology (DLT) users.



When FCA licensing begins—and how the transition will work


The FCA’s framework is designed to replace the current uncertainty around where crypto activities sit within the UK’s regulatory perimeter. According to David Geale, executive director of payments and digital finance at the FCA, the regulator has built a system intended to provide “regulatory certainty” without forcing firms to choose between compliance and innovation.


“We’ve created a framework that doesn’t force firms to choose between regulatory certainty and room to innovate – this regime means they can have both in a stable, competitive home to build and grow.”

Under the new rules, authorization will be required for a range of crypto businesses. The FCA explicitly includes cryptocurrency trading venues, custodial providers, stablecoin issuers, staking firms and other intermediaries that fall within the scope of the regime.


For companies already operating with authorization under the UK’s money laundering regulations, the FCA said those permissions will not be automatically converted. These firms will need to secure the relevant FCA authorization under the new framework.


The FCA also outlined transitional “savings provisions” that allow certain firms to continue specified activities for a limited time while they pursue authorization. It further stated that pre-application support meetings for companies will be available starting next month.


As the licensing process approaches, the regulator plans to publish key policy statements through a webinar on July 17. Separately, it will issue an additional policy statement in September explaining how the regulatory perimeter applies to cryptoasset activities.


Earlier this year, the FCA concluded a consultation on guidelines for the UK’s future crypto regime on June 3, nearly a month before this Tuesday publication.



Authorization standards include capital stress testing and tougher conduct rules


A central feature of the FCA’s framework is a move toward holding crypto firms to standards comparable to other financial service providers in the UK. The FCA said the new regime includes requirements for capital stress-testing, alongside improved rules aimed at market manipulation and insider trading.


For investors and counterparties, the practical importance of these provisions is that they shift compliance from a mostly guidance-led approach toward defined supervisory expectations—particularly around whether firms can withstand adverse conditions and how they are expected to prevent misconduct in market-related activities.


The FCA did not detail figures in the release provided here, but it did emphasize that the framework is meant to establish consistent regulatory expectations for firms operating in the UK crypto market—moving from a period of consultation toward an authorization-led model with clear timelines.



Stablecoin rules: simpler reserve requirements, new safeguards, and user withdrawal rights


The FCA’s framework keeps the core stablecoin approach but makes targeted adjustments to elements that issuers must meet. Among the changes, the regulator simplified the backing asset composition requirement by removing the requirement for estimated redemption forecasts. The FCA also said it will require statutory trust over reserves and will remove unallocated backing fund accounts.


In addition, the FCA’s guidelines will require stablecoin issuers to provide specific withdrawal rights to users and set conditions around reserve holdings. The framework allows a 5% excess to be held in the backing asset pool, and it permits limited intragroup custody arrangements provided that safeguards are in place.


The FCA described the stablecoin approach as establishing a “baseline regime for stablecoin issuance.” It also said it will consult with the Bank of England later this year on how its rules apply to stablecoin issuers that are recognized as systemic by HM Treasury.


For market participants, this matters because stablecoin oversight has direct implications for liquidity and redemption processes. By spelling out user withdrawal rights and reserve structures, the FCA is attempting to reduce uncertainty around how issuers hold and manage the assets intended to back stablecoins.



Next steps: DeFi guidance, operational resilience, and scope limits for “true DeFi”


The FCA’s publishing of the framework does not end the work. The regulator said later this year it will host a separate consultation on decentralized finance (DeFi) guidance and on operational resilience guidelines for firms using distributed ledger technology (DLT).


It also plans to consult on updates to the Financial Crime Guide relevant to crypto asset firms, reflecting the ongoing focus on compliance and risk management as the industry grows.


On DeFi specifically, the FCA indicated it will pursue a case-by-case approach. Matthew Long, director of payments & digital assets at the FCA, said in remarks included in the source material that “true DeFi” scenarios—those with “no identifiable person undertaking the activity”—would fall out of the regulation’s scope.


This distinction is important for builders and users: it suggests that the FCA’s approach may concentrate on identifiable intermediaries and accountable entities, rather than attempting to regulate protocols in an abstract sense where no responsible actor can be identified.



With licensing now set to move from planning into a timed authorization process—plus additional DeFi and operational resilience consultations later this year—market participants should watch how transitional savings provisions are applied, how stablecoin issuers interpret the reserve and withdrawal requirements, and where the FCA draws the line between regulated intermediaries and activities it considers outside the remit of “true DeFi.”



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