While major global economies are still debating how to regulate cryptocurrencies, the UK has quietly made a key institutional move.
On December 3, local time, Lord John McFall, Speaker of the House of Lords, officially announced that the “Property (Digital Assets, etc.) Act” had been approved. This means that with the assent of King Charles, the bill has officially become law. From now on, under the legal framework of England and Wales, cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, and other digital assets are explicitly recognized as a form of property.
This legislation is not created out of thin air, but rather confirms and elevates existing judicial practice. Previously, UK case law had established through multiple judicial decisions that digital assets are considered property. However, this recognition, based on individual cases, always lacked the clarity and stability of statutory law.
The core of this Act is the codification of recommendations made by the UK Law Commission in its 2024 report: for the sake of clarity, to classify crypto assets as a new and unique form of personal property.
UK crypto advocacy group CryptoUK commented, “UK courts have already treated digital assets as property, but this has been entirely achieved through case-by-case judgments. Parliament has now written this principle into law.” This marks a shift in the legal status of digital assets—from the judiciary’s “individual case recognition” to the legislature’s “universal establishment.”
The most significant legal breakthrough of this Act is that it explicitly recognizes that “digital or electronic ‘things’ can be the subject of property rights.”
Under traditional UK property law, personal property is divided into two categories: first, “things in possession” (such as cars, watches, and other tangible items), and second, “things in action” (such as contractual rights, intellectual property, and other intangible items). Due to their unique characteristics—virtual, replicable, but with exclusive control—digital assets do not fit neatly into either category and have long existed in a legal gray area.
The new Act clearly states that “things of a digital or electronic nature” will not be excluded from the scope of property rights simply because they are neither “things in possession” nor “things in action.” This customizes a legal home for digital assets and fundamentally resolves the issue of property rights attribution.
A clear legal status brings with it a series of specific protections and possibilities. Advocacy groups have pointed out that this move brings “greater clarity and protection” for consumers and investors—
Regarding the enactment of this Act, Freddie New, head of Bitcoin policy-related organizations in the UK, stated on social media: “This is an important milestone in the development of Bitcoin in the UK and a major breakthrough for all users who hold and use Bitcoin in the UK.”
This legislation is part of the UK’s ongoing strategy to position itself as a “global crypto hub.” In April this year, the UK government announced plans to bring crypto businesses into a regulatory framework similar to that of other financial firms, aiming to strengthen consumer protection while encouraging innovation.
The passage of this property law is in step with global regulatory trends. Whether it’s the EU’s MiCA framework unifying market rules, the US providing a federal regulatory path for stablecoins through the “GENIUS Act,” or Singapore building an on-chain settlement prototype through its “Guardian Project,” countries are vying for rule-setting power in the digital finance era.
The UK’s approach is unique: rather than rushing into comprehensive business regulation, it started at the most fundamental level of property rights law, laying a solid foundation for the long-term development of the entire industry. This “first clarify property rights, then develop” approach provides stable legal expectations for subsequent regulation and innovation.
The enactment of the “Property (Digital Assets, etc.) Act” is another milestone in the journey of digital assets from a “technological phenomenon” to a “legal institution.”
It is not only about crypto holders within the UK, but also sends a clear signal to the global market: when mainstream jurisdictions formally recognize the property value of digital assets through statutory law, the integration of this asset class into the mainstream financial system becomes irreversible.
The institutional competition in the global crypto landscape is now delving from licensing and tax policy into the very foundations of civil and commercial law. The UK’s step is both solid and far-reaching.
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