SEC Redefines Crypto Landscape, Easing KYC Pressures on Key Assets

John NadaBy John Nada·Mar 19, 2026·10 min read
SEC Redefines Crypto Landscape, Easing KYC Pressures on Key Assets

The SEC's recent interpretive release clarifies crypto asset classifications, easing KYC pressures for Bitcoin, XRP, and Solana while reshaping regulatory dynamics.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has issued a groundbreaking interpretive release that clarifies its stance on various crypto assets, significantly reducing the Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements for many digital currencies, including Bitcoin, XRP, and Solana. This move delineates which parts of the crypto industry fall outside of securities law, effectively providing a regulatory framework that could reshape market dynamics and enhance the operational landscape for developers and software providers.

Previously, the SEC's application of securities law could have compelled developers to register as broker-dealers, imposing strict identity checks and anti-money laundering (AML) obligations. However, the new taxonomy categorizes crypto assets into five distinct groups: digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital tools, stablecoins, and digital securities, thereby reducing the regulatory pressures on certain segments of the industry. Digital commodities, digital collectibles, and digital tools are classified as not being securities, while stablecoins may or may not be, depending on their structure.

Chair Paul Atkins emphasized that this revised framework aims to create clarity around which assets are deemed securities. By categorizing Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and others as digital commodities, the SEC shifts the regulatory burden away from them. This classification not only alleviates KYC pressures but also offers a more favorable environment for innovation in the crypto sector.

The SEC's decision to exclude digital commodities from securities designation is particularly significant as it encompasses a large pool of liquid crypto assets. This clearer path out of the regulatory uncertainties that characterized the previous administration under Gary Gensler is likely to be welcomed by the market. The SEC's interpretation of a digital commodity as a fungible crypto asset linked to the functionality of a crypto system enhances the legitimacy and operational scope for various networks, including those that have previously faced regulatory scrutiny, such as XRP.

Ripple's chief legal officer, Stuart Alderoty, remarked that the SEC's clarification confirms XRP's status as a digital commodity rather than a security, a significant development following years of legal battles. Moreover, this newly defined category extends formal comfort to other networks like Solana, Cardano, and Avalanche, which had previously existed in a contested regulatory environment. The SEC clarified that mining activities for proof-of-work networks and staking activities for proof-of-stake networks do not constitute the offer and sale of a security, further supporting the operational frameworks of Bitcoin, Ethereum, and others.

Another noteworthy aspect of the SEC's taxonomy is the classification of digital collectibles and tools. This includes assets designed for collection or functional use, such as the Ethereum Name Service (ENS) domain names and various non-fungible tokens (NFTs). By framing these assets as utilities acquired for practical purposes rather than as claims to a business enterprise, the SEC opens a lane for innovation in identity, access, and credentialing systems that can now operate with less regulatory oversight.

Stablecoins also receive a more defined position within this framework. The SEC states that payment stablecoins issued by permitted entities under the forthcoming GENIUS Act will be excluded from securities status. However, other stablecoins might still be subject to securities law depending on their specific structures. This distinction allows regulated issuers of dollar-linked stablecoins to navigate the regulatory landscape more clearly while keeping a watchful eye on yield-bearing and complex stablecoin designs.

From a broader perspective, this SEC release represents a long-sought categorization that the crypto industry has needed for years, offering a more structured environment for developers and innovators. Although legal questions surrounding token issuance and distribution remain, this framework provides a more accessible route for non-security crypto assets to be offered and sold.

The implications of this shift are significant. The classification allows for clearer identification of which tokens are likely to succeed under the new regime, as Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and XRP now have stronger legal backing. Additionally, staking networks, wrapped non-security assets, and digital tools benefit from this robust legal standing, potentially driving more investment and innovation in these areas.

Privacy advocates also find a measure of victory in this new regulatory landscape, as the SEC's decision narrows the range of crypto assets that fall under its jurisdiction. This narrowing could foster an environment where software development, self-custody, and other non-custodial tools can thrive without being immediately subjected to KYC and AML regulations. The SEC's acknowledgment that certain functional on-chain assets are not evaluated as investment products paves the way for a more privacy-conscious approach in the crypto space.

The SEC's new crypto taxonomy does more than just redraw markets. Quietly, the new approach blocks a regulatory path that could have forced developers and software providers into KYC-heavy broker-dealer regimes. By classifying much of crypto activity as securities brokerage, the SEC’s earlier approach could have compelled developers and software companies to register as broker-dealers, thereby requiring them to comply with strict identity checks (KYC) and anti-money-laundering (AML) rules.

The digital commodity bucket is the most important part of the release because it reaches the largest pool of liquid crypto assets and provides a clearer path away from the securities hostilities overhang that defined the Gary Gensler era. The SEC describes a digital commodity as a fungible crypto asset linked to the programmatic operation of a functional crypto system, with value tied to utility and supply and demand rather than the essential managerial efforts of others. That definition strengthens the policy position around Bitcoin and Ethereum, but it also extends formal comfort to networks that have sat in a more contested middle ground, including Solana, Cardano, XRP, and Avalanche.

Stuart Alderoty noted, “We always knew XRP wasn't a security – and now the SEC has made clear what it is: a digital commodity.” This clarity is particularly important as it allows these networks to operate without the cloud of securities regulation. The SEC release does more than classify tokens; it also addresses the network activities that help secure them. For proof-of-work networks, the SEC said covered protocol mining activities do not involve the offer and sale of a security, which supports Bitcoin, Litecoin, Dogecoin, and Bitcoin Cash. For proof-of-stake networks, the commission said covered protocol staking activities do not involve the offer and sale of a security either.

This interpretation extends to staking by token holders, the roles of third-party validators and custodians, and the issuance and redemption of staking receipt tokens, which serve as one-for-one receipts for deposited non-security crypto assets. This gives another layer of support to ETH, Solana, Cardano, Avalanche, Polkadot, Tezos, and Aptos. The SEC also affirmed that redeemable wrapped tokens backed one-for-one by deposited non-security crypto assets and redeemable on a fixed one-for-one basis do not involve the offer and sale of a security in the circumstances described by the SEC.

The second group of winners is smaller in market value but more surprising in political and cultural terms. The SEC’s digital collectible category includes assets designed to be collected or used and lacking rights to income, profits, or assets of a business enterprise. Its examples include CryptoPunks, Chromie Squiggles, Fan Tokens, WIF, and VCOIN. The inclusion of WIF, a meme coin, signals to markets that some community-driven tokens can be analyzed less as capital-raising instruments and more as cultural or collectible assets, though the SEC notes that hybrid structures can still raise securities questions.

The digital tools category is another beneficiary. The SEC defines digital tools as crypto assets that perform practical functions such as memberships, tickets, credentials, title instruments, or identity badges. Its examples include Ethereum Name Service (ENS) domain names and CoinDesk’s Microcosms NFT Consensus Ticket. The commission says digital tools are on-chain analogues to physical utilities and that people acquire them for functional use rather than a claim on a business enterprise. This is significant beyond the listed examples because it gives a clearer route for builders working on identity, access, naming, and credential systems. For a sector that has often had to explain why a token is a tool rather than an investment product, the SEC has now supplied its own framework.

Stablecoins also move into a stronger position, though with more conditions than the commodity bucket. The release states that, once the GENIUS Act becomes effective, payment stablecoins issued by permitted payment stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act are excluded from securities status by statute. It also says other stablecoins may or may not be securities depending on the facts and circumstances. This gives regulated dollar-linked issuers a clearer federal lane while keeping yield-bearing and more structured designs under closer scrutiny.

Privacy gets a quiet opening as the SEC’s taxonomy creates no standalone privacy bucket, it narrows the range of crypto assets and crypto activity that sit inside securities treatment. The agency says digital commodities, digital collectibles, and digital tools are not themselves securities, while also stating that the interpretation does not itself create new legal obligations. The commission separately says the Bank Secrecy Act and the Anti-Money Laundering Act are outside the scope of the action. That language is why privacy advocates are treating the move as an opening for the sector, which had come under increased scrutiny over the past few years. Independent journalist L0la L33tz argued in a post on X that the interpretation is a major privacy win because a broader broker-dealer framing for digital-asset developers and software-linked services could have pushed more of the sector toward KYC and AML obligations under securities law.

Her reading captures the shift in jurisdictional terms: a narrower SEC perimeter leaves more room for crypto software and non-security asset activity to exist outside the commission’s core registration regime. The practical benefit of this is strongest around self-custody, open-source development, and non-custodial tools. The SEC’s digital tools category supports that view because it treats functional on-chain assets as utilities acquired for use rather than as claims on a business enterprise. For privacy-focused builders, wallet software, credential layers, and related infrastructure, the release offers a clearer argument that software-linked crypto activity should be analyzed in terms of function and control rather than automatically through an investment-product lens.

Meanwhile, the remaining compliance boundary sits with Treasury and FinCEN. FinCEN’s 2019 guidance says an anonymizing software provider is not a money transmitter because supplying software differs from accepting and transmitting value. In the same guidance, FinCEN says an anonymizing services provider that accepts and retransmits value is a money transmitter under its rules. That leaves privacy advocates with a meaningful policy gain inside securities law while AML and money-transmission obligations continue to be handled through a separate federal framework.

The broader significance of the SEC release is that it offers a sorting mechanism the industry has wanted for years without dissolving every legal question around token issuance and distribution. The commission says a non-security crypto asset can still be offered and sold, subject to an investment contract that remains a security. In practice, that means classification helps most when a token is closely tied to a functioning network, a practical use case, or a decentralized system rather than to a promoter’s ongoing promises about enterprise value. That leaves the winners from this framework easier to identify. Bitcoin, ETH, Solana, XRP, and other named digital commodities gain the clearest immediate boost. Staking networks, wrapped non-security assets, digital tools, and payment stablecoins receive stronger legal framing. Meanwhile, privacy-focused crypto projects gain a narrower but still important opening because the SEC has drawn a firmer boundary around its own authority. So, the next chapter for the market will turn on how exchanges, issuers, developers, and Treasury-led compliance agencies respond to that new map.

Scroll to load more articles