What Is the CLARITY Act and Why Is It Bullish for Crypto?

By Vuk Martin

Anti-evasion rule

Crypto in the US still has a basic problem. You can buy a token on a major exchange, use it on a network, stake it, pay fees with it, and still not know which rulebook applies. Is it a security (SEC rules), a commodity (CFTC rules), or something that changes over time?

That uncertainty affects: 

  • Where exchanges operate
  • Where founders build
  • Whether big institutions feel safe touching the market

When rules are unclear, regulators tend to fill the gap with lawsuits and settlements, and everyone else has to guess what comes next.

That’s why the CLARITY Act matters for crypto. It’s a major market structure bill designed to put clearer lines around who regulates what, and how tokens can be treated as commodities when networks mature. 

Markets often read that kind of clarity as bullish, because it can unlock capital, products, and US-based growth.

Key highlights:

  • The CLARITY Act is a proposed US market structure bill that aims to reduce legal uncertainty in crypto by defining digital assets, splitting regulatory roles, and creating clearer compliance paths
  • It gives the CFTC primary oversight of “digital commodities” and spot markets, while the SEC retains authority over digital asset securities
  • Markets view this as bullish because clearer rules can unlock institutional participation, regulated liquidity, and US-based product growth
  • As of January 2026, the bill has passed the House and sits in the Senate process, meaning clarity is not guaranteed yet

What is the CLARITY Act (Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025)?

Think of the CLARITY Act as an attempt to write a real rulebook for US crypto markets, instead of letting policy get made case-by-case in court.

At a high level, the bill tries to do three things:

  1. Define key terms like “digital asset,” “digital commodity,” and what it means for a blockchain system to be “mature”
     
  2. Split oversight between regulators so the SEC and CFTC aren’t stepping on each other as much
     
  3. Set up practical compliance paths for trading platforms and certain token-related activity, with baseline protections like anti-fraud rules.

This is also a response to the long-running complaint from the industry – “regulation by enforcement.” That phrase basically means companies don’t get clear guidance first, they get sued after. 

I want to make this clear: the CLARITY Act is not law yet.

  • It was introduced in the House on May 29, 2025.
  • It passed the House on July 17, 2025.
  • As of January 2026, it’s still moving through the Senate.

So when you see “bullish” headlines, read them as pricing in possible future clarity, not celebrating a finished regulatory overhaul.

The big change: clear lines between the SEC and the CFTC

The idea is that the SEC stays the securities cop, while the CFTC becomes the main cop for many token spot markets.

Today, a lot of the confusion comes from overlap. The SEC says many tokens are securities (often as “investment contracts”). The CFTC has said certain crypto assets are commodities, but its spot market authority has been limited compared to its futures oversight.

CLARITY tries to draw clearer boundaries:

  • SEC: keeps authority over digital asset securities, meaning tokens that are still treated like securities under US law
  • CFTC: gets primary authority over digital commodities, including clearer power to supervise spot markets (buying and selling the actual token, not a futures contract)

“Digital commodity” VS “mature blockchain system”

CLARITY doesn’t treat every token the same. It creates a framework where some digital assets can be treated more like commodities when a network is sufficiently established and decentralized.

Two concepts are important:

  • Digital commodity: a category for certain digital assets that can fall under the Commodity Exchange Act framework, which is the CFTC’s home turf.
     
  • Mature blockchain system: a way to describe a blockchain that meets standards tied to decentralization and time in operation (in plain English, it’s not brand-new, and it’s not controlled by one party).

The investor-friendly takeaway is that the bill tries to create a pathway. Early-stage projects may still look like securities offerings. 

Over time, if the network becomes more decentralized and meets the bill’s standards, the token can fit more naturally into a commodity-style framework.

It’s also important to not overread this. The bill doesn’t “bless” any specific token by name. Classification depends on facts and meeting the bill’s tests.

What does the CLARITY Act actually do for crypto?

If CLARITY becomes law, the changes could be big.

Right now, many crypto businesses operate with a constant legal fog around basic questions:

  • Can a US exchange list a token without risking an SEC action?
  • What rules should a spot market follow, and who enforces them?
  • What disclosures should a token project give, and when?

CLARITY tries to replace that fog with a more standard crypto regulation system. It builds out registration options and ongoing obligations for key players in the crypto market, while still keeping enforcement tools like anti-fraud and anti-manipulation.

Of course, “clearer rules” doesn’t mean “no rules.” If you want legitimacy, you also get paperwork, controls, audits, lawyers, and timelines. 

For strong businesses, that can be protection. For smaller teams, it can be a strain.

New rules for exchanges and brokers: a CFTC registration path for spot trading

One of the most market-moving parts of CLARITY is the push toward a clearer CFTC registration regime for digital commodity spot markets.

The bill sets up a way for:

  • Digital commodity exchanges
  • Digital commodity brokers
  • Digital commodity dealers

…to register with the CFTC and operate under a consistent set of rules.

Why this matters to everyday users:

  • More consistent oversight can mean fewer “anything goes” venues.
  • Rules around recordkeeping, monitoring, and customer protections can cut down on the worst behavior (wash trading, fake volume, messy custody practices).

Why it matters to institutions:

  • Institutions don’t just want upside, they want a checklist they can satisfy.
  • Clear registration categories and defined supervision can make it easier for compliance teams to say yes.

CLARITY also ties covered intermediaries to familiar financial crime expectations, including Bank Secrecy Act and AML obligations

I know that’s not exciting, but it’s the type of boring structure large firms need before they scale exposure.

Rules for token issuers and disclosures

CLARITY also addresses how certain token-related parties behave when a token is treated as a digital commodity.

The bill includes disclosure and conduct expectations for “digital commodity issuers” and related persons, plus an anti-evasion rule. 

Here are two examples of what this targets:

  • Setting up shell entities to claim “no issuer exists”
  • Shuffling IP or control rights around to blur accountability

This isn’t punishing legit decentralization. It’s about stopping obvious games that leave buyers with no reliable information and no accountable actor.

For projects that want to play it straight, clearer disclosure lanes can be helpful. You can design distributions, fundraising, and token economics with more confidence about what will be expected.

Why the CLARITY Act is seen as bullish for crypto

Markets like clarity for the same reason drivers like traffic lights. A green light doesn’t guarantee you’ll reach your destination, but it reduces chaos at the intersection.

Here’s why many investors view the CLARITY Act as bullish for crypto. I’ll also explain the parts that might feel less bullish once the details hit.

Clarity can bring in bigger investors and more US-based liquidity

Large investors tend to avoid gray zones. They tend to avoid high risk in general, and legal uncertainty is a special kind of risk. You can’t hedge it well, you can’t model it cleanly, and it can hit fast.

If CLARITY becomes law, it could reduce a few common institutional blockers:

  • Defined regulator roles: less guessing whether SEC or CFTC rules apply.
  • Clearer compliance planning: firms can budget for registration, controls, reporting, and supervision.
  • More confidence building in the US: fewer incentives to route activity offshore just to lower regulatory ambiguity.

That doesn’t automatically pump prices. What it can do is raise the odds of deeper liquidity, more regulated venues, and more mainstream participation. Over time, that can support stronger markets.

There’s also a second-order effect. Once rules are clearer, product teams can design offerings that fit the law from day one. That can speed up launches of US-friendly trading, custody, and market infrastructure.

A clearer path for staking, mining, and real network use cases

A lot of crypto’s real utility looks weird through old financial law. 

Crypto staking, validating, mining, paying gas fees, earning network rewards, running nodes, these are normal network actions. But when a token’s legal status is unclear, people worry that normal use could be treated like a regulated securities activity.

CLARITY recognizes common network activity as legitimate use in the context of a digital commodity framework. The practical benefit is psychological as well as legal. It can reduce the “are we allowed to do this?” hesitation that slows adoption.

If a token qualifies under the bill’s approach, that can make it easier for:

  • Wallet apps and staking services to design features with fewer legal landmines
     
  • Infrastructure providers to operate with less fear that routine activity gets re-labeled as brokerage or issuance
     
  • Enterprises to use networks for payments, settlement, or tokenized workflows without feeling like they’re walking into an SEC trap

It doesn’t remove all risk. It does make normal network behavior easier to describe and defend.

What isn’t bullish

Clarity has tradeoffs.

  1. Registration and ongoing rules can raise costs. Some firms will welcome that because it pushes out weak players. Others will struggle, especially smaller platforms that relied on loose standards.
     
  2. Some structures could face new scrutiny. Depending on how final rules and interpretations land, some pooled products or yield-like programs may get treated in ways that change how they can be offered to US users.
     
  3. Stablecoins can become a flash point. CLARITY includes language around “permitted payment stablecoins” and adds anti-fraud authority in this area. That sounds reasonable, but stablecoin rules tend to raise hard questions, e.g. what incentives are allowed and whether interest-like features belong in a “payment stablecoin” bucket.

Markets often like clarity overall. But parts of the industry may have to rework products, revenue models, and user flows to fit the final law.

What happens next: status in January 2026 

As of January 2026, the CLARITY Act has passed the House and sits in the Senate process. A key near-term event is a planned Senate Banking Committee markup.

Gavel

A “markup” is the meeting where lawmakers debate the bill text, propose amendments, and vote on whether to advance the updated version out of committee.

If you’re following this as an investor, builder, or just a US-based user, here’s what you should be looking at:

  • Changes to the SEC vs CFTC boundary: small wording tweaks can shift a lot of power
     
  • Stablecoin language: watch how “permitted payment stablecoins” are defined and constrained
     
  • Compliance timelines: long runways help markets adapt, short ones can break smaller firms
     
  • Senate leadership and floor time: even strong bills can stall if they never get scheduled for a full vote

But for now, it’s still not guaranteed. And big investors know this. Back in December when the CLARITY act was delayed, crypto ETFs lost $952 million in a week.

Until a final Senate vote happens, and any House Senate differences are resolved, the bill remains a powerful signal, not a finished rulebook.

The bottom line

The CLARITY Act is an attempt to give US crypto a clearer set of rules on when a token is a security, when it’s a digital commodity, and which agency is in charge of the main trading markets. 

It also builds a CFTC-led framework for many spot platforms, with stronger baseline protections like anti-fraud rules and registration paths.

That’s why many people see it as bullish. More certainty can mean more legitimacy, more US liquidity, and more big-money participation that’s been waiting on clearer law.

Still, it’s not law yet, and Senate changes could change key parts. Keep an eye on the Senate Banking Committee markup and the final text, and treat headlines as signals, not guarantees.

FAQ

What does the CLARITY Act mean for Bitcoin?

The CLARITY Act focuses on regulatory structure, not individual assets, but its framework could benefit Bitcoin by strengthening CFTC oversight of digital commodity spot markets. Cleaner rules can make institutional participation and US-based trading infrastructure easier to scale.

When will the CLARITY Act be passed? 

As of January 2026, the bill has passed the House and is in the Senate process, awaiting committee markup and potential floor time. Until the Senate votes and reconciles language with the House, the timeline remains uncertain.

What was the purpose of the CLARITY Act?

The goal of the CLARITY Act is to create a consistent US regulatory framework for digital assets. It defines key terms, splits oversight between the SEC and CFTC, and sets up compliance paths for spot trading and related activities. 

Who opposes the CLARITY Act?

Opposition comes from consumer advocates (e.g., NCLC, Consumer Reports, Public Citizen), labor unions (AFL-CIO), anti-corruption groups (Transparency International), financial reform advocates, and some progressive Democrats. Critics argue it weakens investor protections, creates loopholes, risks retirement funds, and enables industry self-dealing.

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