A closer look at the FDIC's 2025 crypto banking shift and the CLARITY Act timeline, and what both moves mean for U.S. banks and digital assets.A closer look at the FDIC's 2025 crypto banking shift and the CLARITY Act timeline, and what both moves mean for U.S. banks and digital assets.

Crypto Banking Rules: FDIC Shift and CLARITY Act

2026/03/18 00:10
4 min read
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Crypto banking rules shifted materially in 2025 after the FDIC said on March 28 that supervised banks no longer need prior approval to engage in permissible crypto-related activities, while Congress later advanced the CLARITY Act to define a broader market structure framework.

The cleanest verified part of the story is the FDIC’s March 28, 2025 policy change. The agency said FDIC-supervised institutions may engage in permissible crypto-related activities without first seeking approval, and it rescinded FIL-16-2022 while keeping safety-and-soundness standards in place.

That mattered because the prior approval requirement had become a practical brake on bank participation in digital asset services. Axios described the move as a major reversal from the tighter posture regulators took in 2022 and 2023.

March 28 reset the banking side of the debate

The FDIC did not give banks a blank check. Its statement said institutions still need to manage market, liquidity, operational, consumer-protection, and anti-money laundering risks before expanding crypto activity.

That distinction is important for readers following broader adoption. A regulator can remove a procedural barrier, but bank rollout still depends on compliance capacity, internal risk appetite, and whether services tie into products such as stablecoins or custody.

Congress moved later, but on a different lane

The legislative thread came afterward. Congress.gov shows H.R. 3633, the CLARITY Act was introduced on May 29, 2025, passed the House on July 17, 2025 by a 294-134 vote, and was referred to the Senate Banking Committee on September 18, 2025.

The bill summary says it would create a federal framework for digital commodities, give the CFTC the lead role over those markets, and apply Bank Secrecy Act obligations to exchanges, brokers, and dealers. That is broader than the FDIC shift, which focused on how supervised banks can approach permissible crypto activity.

This is where the original truncated headline appears to compress separate developments into one urgent line. The available research did not verify the specific phrase that Congress had only “weeks left” to convince banks, so the stronger reading is that Washington was moving on two parallel tracks, banking access and market-structure law.

What banks and crypto firms still needed next

The FDIC said additional crypto-related guidance could follow through interagency work, which means the March 28 change was more of an opening move than a finished rulebook. That helps explain why policy momentum in Congress still mattered even after the approval hurdle was removed.

Industry voices used similar language in the stablecoin debate. In the same Senate Banking Committee release, Jonathan Jachym said it was “critical” for lawmakers to come together in the coming months, reinforcing the argument that clearer federal rules could shape adoption, competition, and dollar-based digital payments.

For readers tracking adjacent crypto policy shifts, CoinLive has also covered how tokenized stocks are quietly expanding on Solana and whether Bitcoin’s latest breakout setup can hold if U.S. regulation becomes less restrictive. The same policy backdrop also matters for events such as NZCryptoCon’s broader Web3 push, where institutional participation still depends on regulatory clarity.

Related articles

NZCryptoCon Launches as New Zealand’s Largest Crypto & Web3 Event, with Swyftx Named as Official Naming Rights Partner

Solana Turns 6 as 200+ Tokenized Stocks Quietly List

The verified takeaway is narrower than the headline fragment suggests: the FDIC made it easier for supervised banks to pursue permissible crypto activity on March 28, 2025, and Congress later advanced a separate bill aimed at long-term market structure. What to watch next is whether interagency guidance and Senate action turn those two signals into workable rules for banks and digital asset firms.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, legal, or financial advice.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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