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UK Recognizes Digital Assets as Property, Marking a Shift in Legal Treatment of Crypto

 |  December 3, 2025

The UK government this week enacted the Property (Digital Assets etc.) Bill, a measure that for the first time provides statutory recognition of digital assets as a distinct form of personal property. Although English courts had previously treated certain crypto assets as property through common-law decisions, the bill’s passage means digital assets now enjoy a legislatively-created property status rather than simply a judicially-inferred one. The change is expected to reshape how courts address ownership, theft, insolvency, and succession disputes involving crypto.

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    The legislation implements recommendations of the Law Commission of England and Wales and applies across England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. It defines “a thing of a digital or electronic nature” as a form of personal property creating a statutory anchor point for what had previously been addressed through a patchwork of rulings under existing property categories, such as things in possession and things in action.

    The codification is particularly important because English property law traditionally develops through judicial accretion rather than legislative intervention. Parliament’s commentary on the bill noted that the law intentionally does not attempt to delineate which digital assets qualify under the statute. Instead, it delegates further development of definitions and distinctions to the courts to preserve common-law flexibility.

    Legal practitioners broadly welcomed the statute. Etay Katz, Ashurst’s head of digital assets, told Decrypt it a “timely statutory recognition” that signals the UK’s ambition to become a global digital-assets hub. In a statement posted on X, industry body CryptoUK likewise highlighted the operational significance of statutory property status, particularly for evidentiary standards in ownership disputes and recovery claims following fraud.

    Read more: Fed’s Bowman Pushes New Rules for Banks and Stablecoin Issuers

    For litigants, the bill bolsters the availability of proprietary remedies such as constructive trusts, tracing claims, and injunctive relief—tools that have been unevenly applied in digital-asset cases until now. Tokenization initiatives may particularly benefit, as the statute supplies the legal infrastructure required for enforceable transfer and segregation of on-chain assets.

    The new property regime comes as the UK reassesses multiple aspects of its crypto regulations. The government is considering a ban on digital-asset donations to political parties, a proposal widely viewed as targeted at Reform UK, which has integrated crypto fundraising into its political operations. Public filings show party leader Nigel Farage receiving substantial speaking fees from crypto industry events, underscoring regulators’ concern that political financing channels may become conduits for opaque digital flows.

    More consequential for market participants, however, are new reporting requirements for trading platforms enacted through the 2025 Budget law. The rules require UK-registered platforms to collect and transmit users’ personal details, tax identification numbers, and transaction histories, beginning January 1, 2026. Policymakers expect the measures to raise £330 million (roughly $417 million) by 2030, though industry analysts warn that heightened compliance burdens could accelerate migration to offshore venues.

    Per CryptoUK, “By providing a clear legal basis for ownership and transfer, the UK is now better positioned to support the growth of new financial products, tokenized real-world assets, and more secure digital markets.”