Crypto regulation is moving from enforcement theatre to infrastructure design — but the legal foundation is still unfinished. As the Clarity Act window narrows before U.S. midterms, builders face a practical choice: wait for Washington, or architect systems that can survive shifting rules, local compliance demands, and future political reversals.
For the past year, regulators and policymakers have been actively building frameworks and guidance for digital assets under a new federal administration that is decidedly supporting the industry. The GENIUS Act, signed into law in July 2025, established a federal regulatory framework for payment stablecoins, with full implementation coming in January 2027. The SEC and CFTC issued a binding joint interpretation at the commission level (though subject to modification by the agencies under a future administration), establishing a five-category token taxonomy and confirming that certain categories of crypto assets do not qualify as securities.
However, the most consequential piece of the puzzle, the Clarity Act, which would establish comprehensive market structure legislation, remains unfinished. A compromise on stablecoin yield provisions has been reached, and a Banking Committee markup is now targeted for late April with a Senate floor vote potentially following in May. But the legislative window is real and finite. Midterm campaigning will dominate the calendar by fall, and what passes now could look different under a future administration. Builders who treat compliance as an architectural decision rather than a legislative outcome are the ones whose systems will survive political cycles.
Testing compliance under new frameworks
This year will be a turning point, as the industry tests out compliance under new frameworks for the first time, and integrating digital assets into the existing financial system will test how these frameworks hold up under shifting political conditions. The regulatory environment was once enforcement-driven, but is now driven by building structured frameworks, and since this transition is led by agencies, it isn’t codified and could still be reversed.
The integration of digital assets into traditional financial infrastructure is accelerating faster than the legislative calendar can keep up, and institutional practice is outpacing what Congress has formally codified. Regulatory progress is time-sensitive, but builders who wait for final legislative clarity before adapting their systems risk being caught behind the curve.
Regulation Revolution?
Crypto regulation passing, namely the Clarity Act, still faces political hurdles, including Democratic demands for DeFi provisions and restrictions on government officials’ crypto holdings. Combined with a tight legislative window before midterm campaigning intensifies, the path forward is riddled with questions.
A clear change in dynamics is emerging as regulators have begun coordinating rather than competing, evidenced by initiatives like “Project Crypto” designed to align standards, definitions, and supervisory approaches. The push is driven by the need to manage systemic risks, prevent regulatory arbitrage, and address the inherently cross-border nature of digital assets. Combined, these developments signal a move toward a more mature and predictable regulatory environment that prioritizes market integrity and could accelerate institutional adoption, enabling a more inclusive and fluid global financial system.
Designing for compliance
Builders in crypto should be designing their systems to operate across multiple regulatory frameworks from the outset. That includes non-custodial architecture, open standards, decentralized governance, and composable smart contracts.
The most critical decision is separating the protocol layer from the interface layer. The protocol layer handles settlement and liquidity. The interface layer serves as the centralized access point for users and adapts to jurisdiction-specific requirements like KYC, licensing, and consumer protection rules without altering the underlying smart contracts. As a result, the back-end remains credibly neutral and decentralized, while the front-end evolves to meet legal and regulatory expectations wherever the user is. This means combining global interoperability with localized compliance.
The March 17 joint interpretation from the SEC and CFTC validates that approach. Tokens that derive value from the programmatic operation of a functional crypto system are treated as commodities, not securities. Builders who architect this separation can decrease their long-term compliance risk and meet the standards regulators have signaled they want to see.
Compliance costs and the charter path
Builders should also be clear-eyed about who the new frameworks favor. For instance, the GENIUS Act's reserve and audit requirements, like monthly attestations, one-to-one liquid asset backing, and full redemption obligations, effectively price out smaller issuers. A startup issuing a dollar-pegged token from a DAO will typically struggle to meet these standards the way a regulated financial institution can. The law is likely to consolidate the stablecoin market around well-capitalized, compliant issuers, and builders need to plan for that.
That means either partnering with regulated entities that already have the compliance infrastructure or pursuing federal legitimacy directly. The OCC charter path is increasingly viable. Roughly a dozen companies have filed for or received conditional national trust bank charter approvals since December 2025, and Coinbase received conditional approval in early April. On April 1, an OCC rule amendment took effect, clarifying that national trust banks are authorized to conduct non-fiduciary custody, the exact capability that crypto firms building on this charter structure need. For builders with the resources and the long-term orientation, a federal charter can be a viable solution.
Engaging with policymakers
The crypto industry has become far more engaged with policymaking than it was just five years ago, and many rules are still being shaped. Builders now have a meaningful opportunity to influence outcomes by contributing technical expertise through advocacy groups like the Blockchain Association, Coin Center, and The Digital Chamber.
These channels allow developers to help lawmakers better understand the technical and economic realities of decentralized systems, reducing the risk of misinformed regulation. Beyond direct advocacy, open standards and thorough technical research also shape policy indirectly, as widely adopted protocols and credible studies become reference points for regulators.
Builders further strengthen their influence by demonstrating real-world use cases, such as reliable payment systems, transparent stablecoin reserves, and safer DeFi infrastructure. These efforts combined help regulators see how blockchain can enhance financial stability and consumer protection, aligning innovation with public policy goals.
What's at stake
Builders should weigh the durability of the clarity they are building on against the possibility of future change. Agency guidance carries serious institutional weight, but it’s not a statute. The Clarity Act would codify it permanently. Without it, the framework could rest on institutional commitment and case-by-case court decisions. Offshore dependencies can compound this risk.
The political calendar makes all of this more urgent. Upcoming U.S. midterm elections could quickly change the picture, and future administrations may appoint leadership in agencies like the SEC that reassert an enforcement-driven approach. Builders who design systems that are both technologically resilient and regulatory-ready are better positioned to adapt if the rules change.