Elon Musk’s social platform is reshaping its stance on promotions, with x crypto ads now allowed in many regions under stricter transparency rules.
The latest crypto news from Elon Musk‘s X confirms that businesses can run crypto-related promotions, provided they do not target users in the European Union and the United Kingdom. Moreover, creators must now disclose paid promotions more clearly to increase transparency for followers.
The platform has introduced a new Paid Partnership label that appears on posts when a creator receives money, perks, commissions, or other incentives from a brand. However, the label only applies when the creator actively turns on the disclosure setting for a specific post.
Head of Product Nikita Bier said X is updating its sponsored content product to support crypto-related sponsored posts. He also highlighted the new label, which will signal when a creator has a financial relationship with the company featured in the content.
According to recent crypto news, Bier said the goal is straightforward: help people build businesses on X while keeping followers informed so that crypto sponsored posts do not blend seamlessly into ordinary conversation. That said, X insists this must happen without sacrificing compliance in tough regulatory markets.
The new policy allows paid promotional crypto posts in many jurisdictions, as long as creators use the Paid Partnership label and follow the rules. However, X still blocks these deals in stricter markets, including the United Kingdom, the European Union, and Australia, where financial promotion rules remain tight.
In practice, the burden rests on the influencer rather than the platform. If a creator signs a paid deal with a crypto project, they must ensure users in the EU, the UK, and Australia cannot see that paid partnership content. Moreover, X’s policy notes these regions treat financial promotions, including crypto, as prohibited for paid partnerships, alongside gambling-related campaigns.
Because of this stance, many observers see the changes as a calibrated shift rather than a full policy reversal on crypto promo restrictions. Creators must use targeting and visibility tools to block restricted audiences or avoid running the campaign in those regions entirely.
The update arrives after years in which crypto teams treated X, formerly Twitter, as their main public forum. It is where token launches get debated in real time, security researchers warn about scams, and founders try to earn trust with ongoing posts and threads.
Now, as x crypto ads become formally permitted under certain conditions, X is effectively saying that once money changes hands, the audience deserves a clearly visible label. However, the platform also signals it will not relax standards for other sensitive sectors.
X defines a paid partnership broadly in its recent announcement on crypto-related promotional ads. It can include a straightforward sponsorship, free products, commissions via affiliate links, discount codes, or more formal ambassador arrangements. Moreover, once a creator toggles the disclosure setting, X automatically applies the label to the relevant post.
The company also requires creators to follow local advertising laws and make the promotion obvious without forcing people to click through profiles or links to figure out what is being sold. That said, X still draws firm boundaries around certain ad categories, despite the new flexibility for crypto in some markets.
Paid partnerships remain banned for adult and sexual products, alcohol, dating services, drugs, health and wellness supplements, tobacco, weapons, and commercial content tied to political or social issues. In other words, X is opening one door for crypto while keeping several others firmly shut.
According to recent crypto news, X is also preparing broader product changes that could reshape how money moves inside the app. Elon Musk has said X Money, the platform’s payments system, should arrive as a limited beta within roughly one to two months, ahead of a wider rollout later.
He presents it as part of his plan to turn X into an everything app that merges social posting, messaging, and financial tools. However, it remains unclear whether X Money will directly integrate digital assets or focus first on traditional payment rails.
Still, Bier has highlighted another feature that leans more directly into markets and trading. X plans to launch Smart Cashtags, which would allow users to trade stocks and crypto directly from the timeline. Moreover, if that rollout lands as described, X will not only host market conversations; it will sit closer to the trade itself.
In summary, X is tightening transparency rules while cautiously expanding space for crypto promotions, payments, and trading tools. The platform now expects influencers to handle regional compliance as it tests how far it can go toward becoming a fully fledged financial and social hub.


