The UK has enacted a law that formally classifies digital assets as personal property. The Property (Digital Assets etc) Act received royal assent after passage through Parliament. The move gives cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, and other digital items a defined legal status for the first time.
Lord Speaker John McFall approved the Act in the House of Lords. The development was welcomed by the advocacy group Crypto UK, which said that the new rules would help clarify the rights of crypto owners. Freddie New of Bitcoin Policy UK described the move as a significant development for users seeking greater protection.
UK common law had already recognized digital assets as property through individual judgments. Courts treated crypto as an asset that could be subject to injunctions, freezing orders, and recovery processes. Yet decisions varied across cases. The Act eliminates uncertainty by turning those principles into statutory rules.
Parliament’s action confirms that digital items can be objects of personal property rights. CryptoUK noted that statutory recognition removes ambiguity that often hinders dispute resolution. The group noted that ownership, transfer, and recovery procedures will now operate under a consistent legal framework.
The Act clarifies that a digital item does not need to fit into traditional categories to qualify as personal property. UK law distinguishes between personal property as tangible “things in possession” and intangible “things in action.” Digital assets do not align neatly with either classification, which creates gaps in enforcement and interpretation.
The Law Commission warned in 2024 that those gaps could hinder courts, administrators, and insolvency proceedings. It argued that digital assets can exhibit qualities of both established categories and should be recognized accordingly. Parliament has now adopted that view and closed the legal loophole.
The new structure supports ownership claims, asset recovery in cases of theft or fraud, and inclusion in estate and insolvency processes. Courts and administrators can now apply standardized rules when assessing digital holdings. Advocates say the clarity strengthens confidence for users and platforms.
CryptoUK said the law supports the development of tokenised real-world assets and new financial products. Market analysts argue that property rights are essential for tokenisation because digital instruments must rely on enforceable ownership structures.
Firms working in tokenised securities, payment instruments, and blockchain-based settlement systems have pushed for clear rules. The Act provides a defined framework for custody models, transfer mechanisms, and security arrangements. Industry groups anticipate that the framework will stimulate investment and increase institutional interest.
The UK has seen rising crypto adoption. The Financial Conduct Authority reported late last year that about 12% of adults hold digital assets, up from 10% in the previous survey.
The property reform arrives alongside another major policy shift. As CNF previously reported, the UK government confirmed in the 2025 Budget that new reporting obligations for cryptocurrency traders will begin on January 1.
Under the Cryptoasset Reporting Framework, trading platforms are required to share customer information, including transactional data and tax reference numbers, with HM Revenue & Customs. The rules are a result of an international agreement led by the OECD and are aimed at establishing uniform reporting standards among jurisdictions.
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