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Wednesday Dec 3 2025 05:00
3 min
The United Kingdom has announced the enactment of a new law for digital assets, including cryptocurrencies and stablecoins, treating these assets as property. Supporters believe this move will provide better protection for cryptocurrency users and clarify the legal framework surrounding them.
Lord Speaker John McFall announced in the House of Lords that the Property (Digital Assets etc) Bill received royal assent, signifying King Charles' agreement to transform the bill into an Act of Parliament and enact it.
Freddie New, policy chief at the advocacy group Bitcoin Policy UK, stated on X that "the bill becoming law is a massive step forward for Bitcoin in the United Kingdom and for everyone who owns and uses it here."
Common law in the UK, based on judges' decisions, has already established that digital assets are property. However, this bill aimed to codify a recommendation from the Law Commission of England and Wales in 2024, which proposed classifying cryptocurrencies as a new form of personal property for greater clarity.
CryptoUK clarified that "UK courts have already treated digital assets as property, but this was through individual case-by-case judgments." They added, "Parliament has now enshrined this principle in law."
The group further stated, "This provides digital assets with a much clearer legal foundation – especially regarding matters such as proving ownership, recovering stolen assets, and handling them in cases of insolvency or inheritance."
CryptoUK emphasized that the bill affirms that "digital or electronic 'things' can be considered objects with personal property rights."
UK law categorizes personal property in two ways: "a thing in possession," referring to tangible property like a car, and "a thing in action," denoting intangible property, such as the right to enforce a contract.
The bill clarifies that "anything digital or electronic in nature" is not excluded from personal property rights simply because it is neither "a thing in possession" nor "a thing in action."
The Law Commission argued in its 2024 report that digital assets can possess both qualities. They also noted that the unclear fit of digital assets into property rights laws could hinder dispute resolution in court.
CryptoUK stated on X that the law grants "greater clarity and protection for consumers and investors" and gives cryptocurrency holders "the same confidence and certainty they expect with other forms of property."
They added, "Digital assets can be clearly owned, recovered in cases of theft or fraud, and included within insolvency and estate processes."
The group noted that the UK now possesses a "clear legal basis for ownership and transfer" of cryptocurrencies, and the country is now "better positioned to support the growth of new financial products, tokenized real-world assets, and more secure digital markets."
The country's financial authority reported late last year that approximately 12% of UK adults own cryptocurrency, an increase from 10% in its previous findings.
The UK also unveiled plans for a cryptocurrency regulatory regime in April, which would subject cryptocurrency companies to rules similar to those governing other financial institutions. The aim is to establish the UK as a "global hub" for cryptocurrencies while bolstering consumer protection.
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