To provide for the regulation of payment stablecoins, and for other purposes.
Summary
What This Bill Does
The STABLE Act of 2025 builds a detailed federal framework for dollar-denominated payment stablecoins. It bars anyone other than a permitted payment stablecoin issuer from issuing a U.S. payment stablecoin and, after a transition period, bars custodial intermediaries from offering stablecoins that were not issued by permitted issuers. Permitted issuers must keep at least 1-to-1 reserves in cash, demand deposits, insured-credit-union share drafts, short Treasury securities, repurchase agreements, central-bank reserves, or similarly approved foreign assets; publish monthly reserve reports; redeem stablecoins at par; and avoid pledging or rehypothecating reserves except under narrow liquidity-management rules. The bill gives approval, supervision, examination, and enforcement roles to the Federal Reserve Board, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the National Credit Union Administration, and State payment-stablecoin regulators.
Who Benefits and How
Permitted payment stablecoin issuers benefit from a clear legal route to issue payment stablecoins once they satisfy application, reserve, redemption, and reporting standards. Depository institutions, national banks, Federal credit unions, State credit unions, and trust companies benefit because the bill confirms they may accept deposits, issue deposit-backed digital assets, use distributed ledgers for records and intrabank transfers, and provide custody services when otherwise allowed by law. Payment stablecoin holders benefit from reserve segregation, par redemption duties, monthly public reserve disclosures, customer-property protections, and a two-year moratorium on new endogenously collateralized stablecoins. Foreign issuers in comparable regulatory regimes benefit from a path to U.S. access if Treasury finds their home regime comparable and they consent to U.S. reporting and examination.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Unlicensed stablecoin issuers must leave the U.S. issuance market or obtain permitted status. Custodial stablecoin intermediaries must police whether offered stablecoins are issued by permitted issuers after the transition period. Permitted issuers must hold narrow reserve assets, file applications, publish monthly reserve certifications, comply with Bank Secrecy Act rules, submit reports, face examination, and maintain customer-property segregation. Federal and State payment-stablecoin regulators must review applications, share supervisory information, write rules, examine nonbank issuers, report rulemaking status to Congress, study non-payment stablecoins, and coordinate interoperability standards with the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Key Provisions
- Bars non-permitted persons from issuing payment stablecoins in the United States and bars custodial intermediaries from offering non-permitted stablecoins after the transition period.
- Requires permitted issuers to maintain at least 1-to-1 reserves in specified high-quality liquid assets and publish monthly reserve disclosures.
- Establishes application review, supervision, examination, enforcement, reporting, and revocation procedures for bank-subsidiary and nonbank stablecoin issuers.
- Provides State qualified issuer supervision while preserving Federal backup authority and information sharing with Federal regulators.
- Requires custodians and safekeeping providers to segregate stablecoins, reserves, and private keys as customer property.
- Directs regulators to assess interoperability standards with NIST and pursue comparable-regime agreements with foreign jurisdictions.
- Prohibits new endogenously collateralized stablecoins for two years.
- Clarifies that permitted payment stablecoins are not securities under the Securities Act, Exchange Act, Investment Advisers Act, or Investment Company Act.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Creates a federal payment-stablecoin regime by limiting issuance to permitted bank subsidiaries, approved nonbank subsidiaries, State qualified issuers, and comparable foreign issuers, while imposing 1-to-1 reserve backing, redemption, disclosure, custody, supervision, enforcement, interoperability, and securities-law classification rules.
Key Policy Areas
Financial Services, Banking, Digital Assets, Consumer Protection
Primary Purpose
Creates a federal payment-stablecoin regime by limiting issuance to permitted bank subsidiaries, approved nonbank subsidiaries, State qualified issuers, and comparable foreign issuers, while imposing 1-to-1 reserve backing, redemption, disclosure, custody, supervision, enforcement, interoperability, and securities-law classification rules.
Policy Domains
House resolution provisions
Identified Gains
- Payment stablecoin consumers
- Depository institution providers
- Federal credit unions
- State credit unions
- Trust company custody providers
- Comparable-regime foreign issuer companies
Identified Costs
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
- Federal Reserve Board
- National Credit Union Administration
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- State payment stablecoin agencies
- Stablecoin custody service providers
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
ReportedAdditional sponsors: Mr. Timmons, Mr. Lawler, Mr. Nunn of Iowa, …
Reported with an amendment, committed to the Committee of the …
Mr. Steil (for himself, Mr. Hill of Arkansas, Mr. Torres …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Comparable-regime foreign issuers, Endogenously collateralized stablecoin issuers, Federal qualified nonbank stablecoin issuers
Permitted payment stablecoin issuers faces effects in multiple directions
Positive-direction: Comparable-regime foreign issuers, Loyalty-token issuers, Nonpayment digital asset issuers
Negative-direction: Endogenously collateralized stablecoin issuers, Federal qualified nonbank stablecoin issuers, Nonbank stablecoin subsidiaries, State qualified stablecoin issuers, Unlicensed stablecoin issuers
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal banking regulators
Bank stablecoin subsidiaries, Depository institutions, Federal credit unions
Bank stablecoin subsidiaries faces effects in multiple directions
Custodial stablecoin intermediaries, Stablecoin custody providers
State bank supervisors, State payment stablecoin regulators
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "sec"
- → Securities and Exchange Commission
- "ncua"
- → National Credit Union Administration
- "board"
- → Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
- "treasury"
- → Secretary of the Treasury
- "comptroller"
- → Comptroller of the Currency
- "corporation"
- → Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Key Definitions
Terms defined in this bill
A stablecoin issuer that fits the bill's approved bank-subsidiary, Federal nonbank, State qualified, or comparable foreign issuer categories.
A digital asset used or designed for payment or settlement, denominated in national currency, and redeemable or expected to maintain stable value against a fixed amount of monetary value.
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology