Russia is advancing plans to introduce a nationwide crypto regulation framework that would legalize exchanges and allow retail investors to buy Bitcoin by mid-2027, according to a senior lawmaker overseeing the legislation.
Anatoly Aksakov, chair of the State Duma’s Financial Market Committee, said the long-awaited bill is expected to be put to a vote by lawmakers in late June. If approved, the law would take effect on July 1, 2027, marking Russia’s most significant step toward formal oversight of cryptocurrency markets.
The proposed framework would bring crypto exchanges under clear legal rules for the first time. Platforms operating without registration could face fines or criminal penalties, aligning crypto enforcement with existing laws governing illegal financial activity. Officials say the goal is to reduce systemic risks while increasing transparency across digital asset markets.
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Under the bill, retail investors would be allowed to participate in crypto markets but only after meeting eligibility requirements. These include passing qualification tests designed to assess financial literacy and risk awareness. Lawmakers have also discussed setting an annual purchase cap of $4,000 for non-qualified investors to limit speculative exposure.
This would allow institutional and qualified investors to access more opportunities, with the option to trade cryptocurrencies that are out of reach for the average trader. This is similar to the policymakers’ objective of balancing more market access with robust investor protection.
Despite the existing restrictions, the appetite for direct digital asset exposure among clients of top Russian banks is increasing. Investors are increasingly moving away from derivatives due to the rising role of digital assets in cross-border transactions.
The Russian central bank is set to decide which cryptocurrencies can be traded by ordinary investors. According to legal experts quoted by Russia’s Parliamentary Gazette, regulators will probably allow ordinary investors to trade a small number of highly liquid assets chosen from the top of the global exchange rankings.
Market observers expect that Bitcoin and Ethereum will be included, and other popular tokens, such as Solana and Toncoin, may also be included. Assets that are not included in the approved list will likely be out of the public’s reach and will be available only to accredited investors. These expectations are based on expert analyses and have not been confirmed.
Stablecoins are likely to be accorded preferential treatment. The plan is to allow their use in foreign economic activities through licensed brokerages, even if dollar-based trade is restricted.
Russia’s crypto law has the potential to redefine who will be able to invest, drive more Bitcoin into the regulated fold, and establish settlements as sanctions squeeze the traditional financial pipelines around the globe.
The crypto law suggests a potential future in which crypto markets backed by governments will be possible, blending investor protection, bank supervision, and innovation in a highly controlled economic system.
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