The United Kingdom has passed a law formally recognising digital assets as personal property. The bill provides greater legal clarity for courts ruling on crypto-related cases.
The Property (Digital Assets etc) Act 2025 received Royal Assent on 2 December 2025.
On Tuesday, the UK enacted legislation recognising digital assets as a distinct category of property. The law reached a major milestone after receiving Royal Assent from King Charles III earlier this week, meaning it has been formally approved and is now in force.
The Property (Digital Assets etc) Act 2025, which passed through both Houses of Parliament without amendment, confirms that digital assets can be subject to property rights separate from traditional categories - including physical objects and contractual rights.
The act defines digital assets or “objects of personal property rights” as:
This development is significant, as it gives statutory recognition to digital assets’ legal status as property. Digital asset holders now benefit from greater protection over ownership, inheritance claims, and recovery efforts. It also provides courts with clearer guidance when handling crypto-related disputes.
The bill was first recommended by the Law Commission of England and Wales—an independent statutory body—in 2023, and was introduced to the House of Lords in September 2024. The law applies to England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
The Act has been welcomed by industry stakeholders who have long advocated for formal protection of digital assets.
Susie Ward, CEO of Bitcoin Policy UK, wrote on X:
Bitcoin Policy UK’s Chief Policy Officer, Freddie New, described the legislation as:
“…possibly the biggest change in English property law since the invention of beneficial title in the Middle Ages.”
Crypto Lobbying group, Crypto UK said in a statement on X:
CryptoUK added that the development goes a long way to strengthen the “foundations for future innovation across the UK’s digital asset and tokenisation landscape.”
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

