In CLARITY Act news today, the Senate Banking Committee released the final draft text of the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act on May 12, 2026, just two days before a scheduled May 14 committee markup, and for the first time, crypto investors can see precisely what rules Washington wants to impose on the exchanges, stablecoins, and DeFi platforms they use every day.
The bill covers everything from how banks can hold digital assets to whether your stablecoin app can pay you interest, and several lawmakers believe it could land on President Donald Trump’s desk before July 4, 2026.
Think of the CLARITY Act like a zoning code for a neighborhood that’s been operating without one. Builders (crypto developers), landlords (exchanges), and banks have all been operating in legal gray zones, unsure which rules apply to them.
This bill draws the property lines, defining who needs a license, who’s protected, and who has to follow new safety standards. That clarity is the whole point, and the stakes are high enough that the industry has been lobbying Congress for months to get it done.
The detail most headlines are missing is that this bill could effectively die if it doesn’t pass the committee before the May 21 Memorial Day recess. Senators Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) and Bernie Moreno (R-OH) have warned that a failure to advance before that deadline could push meaningful reconsideration to 2030 or beyond, not next session, not next year, but potentially the end of the decade. The clock is tighter than the July 4 headline date suggests.
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Provision 1: No Passive Yield on Payment Stablecoins
Covered digital asset service providers cannot pay passive interest on payment stablecoin balances, meaning you can’t earn interest on USDC parked on an exchange. This aims to prevent crypto platforms from operating like unregulated banks.
Provision 2: Activity-Based Rewards Allowed
The bill permits rewards linked to transactions, platform usage, and other forms of active participation, but bans rewards for merely holding a balance. The SEC, CFTC, and Treasury will define specific rules around this, leaving some uncertainty for stablecoin holders.
Provision 3: DeFi Developer Protections
Non-custodial blockchain developers won’t be classified as money transmitters just for code that moves value, a win for DeFi builders. However, those who knowingly facilitate illegal transfers remain liable.
Provision 4: Banks and Credit Unions Authorized for Crypto
National and state banks, and certain credit unions, will be explicitly allowed to use digital assets and blockchain for existing banking activities, such as custody and trading, encouraging traditional financial institutions to engage in crypto.
Provision 5: Joint SEC-CFTC Regulations
The SEC and CFTC will develop joint rules for digital asset portfolio margining and modernize recordkeeping standards, aiming to resolve the jurisdictional issues that have created compliance challenges for crypto firms.
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