California’s New Digital Financial Assets Law Requires Application for Cryptocurrency Licenses to be Submitted by July 1, 2026
Apr 14 2026
Entities subject to California’s new Digital Financial Assets Law (“DFAL”), signed by Governor Newsom on October 13, 2023, must either be licensed or have applied through the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System (“NMLS”) for regulatory review by July 1, 2026. The DFAL creates a regulatory framework, including licensure and enforcement authority, for certain crypto activities related to virtual currency exchanging and trading services, including exchanging, transferring, storing, and issuing digital financial assets.
Assembly Bill 39 (AB 39) and Senate Bill 401 (SB 401) together comprise the DFAL. The sponsors of the DFAL argued that “AB 39 will promote a healthy and sustainable crypto asset market by licensing and regulating businesses that help Californians buy and sell these new digital financial products. While crypto assets have the potential to empower consumers and disrupt the financial sector in unexpected ways, their high volatility and the prevalence of fraud, illicit behavior, and technical and security vulnerabilities expose California consumers to significant financial harm.”1 SB 401 addressed cryptocurrency kiosks, stating, “SB 401 establishes consumer protections for crypto kiosks to reduce fraud and other criminal activity and rein-in high mark-ups on crypto transactions.” The bill mitigates the risk of transactions related to fraud and other criminal activity by limiting the amount of transactions to no more than $1,000 per customer per day.
The bill also requires an operator of a crypto kiosk to provide a detailed receipt to a consumer with specified information about the transaction and caps the transaction fees that operators can charge to no more than $5 or 15% of the value of the transaction, whichever is greater.”2 The DFAL addresses the risks posed by crypto kiosks in several ways. In response to concerns about the use of crypto kiosks for fraud and other criminal activity, it seeks to mitigate the size of financial harm related to fraud and deter the use of kiosks by criminal organizations by limiting the size of transactions that any person can initiate to $1,000 per day. To improve oversight of the industry, this bill requires operators to provide DFPI with the locations of all kiosks, which DFPI is required to post online, and to be licensed pursuant to AB 39 (Grayson). Supporters of the bill believe that these requirements create transparency and impose licensure requirements that will help both DFPI and local law enforcement crackdown on unregistered kiosks that they discover when investigating complaints.
On September 29, 2024, AB 1934 extended the initial required license date from July 1, 2025 to July 1, 2026.3 The DFAL has been codified under California Financial Code § 3101 et. seq.
The DFAL was created with a goal of providing a comprehensive regulatory program for many crypto companies, and in that regard DFAL requires DFPI to license and supervise many crypto asset-related companies that serve California residents and establishes certain consumer protections for users. These protections include:
Despite these requirements, the DFAL license does not replace any other licenses that may be required under California law. Further, the DFAL requirements related to stablecoin issuers depend on the characteristics of the stablecoin, requiring an in-depth review regarding potential applicability.
Cal. Fin. Code § 3103 lists several exemptions, including certain banks, persons that only provide certain connectivity software or computing power to decentralized networks, and persons who reasonably expect to make less than $50,000 annually from activity otherwise subject to DFAL licensure.
Merchants accepting digital assets as payment for goods or services do not fall under the definition of who must obtain DFAL licenses and are not subject to the DFAL licensing requirements.
Some of the obligations of holding a DFAL license include:
Entities currently conducting business with California residents that will require obtaining a DFAL license should review the published regulatory license checklist found on the NMLS Resource Center and prepare for application no later than the July 1, 2026 deadline.
1 AB 39, Assembly Floor Analysis, September 12, 2023 (https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billAnalysisClient.xhtml?bill_id=202320240AB39#)
2 SB 401, Senate Rules Committee Analysis, September 14, 2023 (202320240SB401_Senate Floor Analyses.pdf) (“A digital financial asset transaction kiosk (more colloquially known as a “crypto kiosk”) is a physical machine that allows a consumer to buy and sell crypto assets, like bitcoin or ether, using cash, debit or credit card, or bank transfer. Crypto kiosks are often found in grocery, convenience, or liquor stores, and generally target consumers who are less technologically savvy and less knowledgeable about crypto markets than consumers who purchase crypto assets on online and mobile platforms, such as Coinbase and Kraken. Operators of crypto kiosks are not subject to any state oversight or regulation of their business practices. The Department of Financial Protection and Innovation has not deemed crypto assets as “money” under state money transmission laws, and California has yet to enact a regulatory framework for crypto-related business activities.”).
3 AB 1934. 3201 (Finance Code 3201: “On or after July 1, 2026, a person shall not engage in digital financial asset business activity, or hold itself out as being able to engage in digital financial asset business activity, with or on behalf of a resident unless any of the following is true: (a) The person is licensed in this state by the department under Section 3203. (b) The person submits an application on or before July 1, 2026, and is awaiting approval or denial of that application. (c) The person is exempt from licensure under this division pursuant to Section 3103.”). (Bill Text - AB-1934 Digital financial asset businesses.)