SEC Says Some Crypto Interfaces May Not Need Broker Registration

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said some self-custodial crypto interfaces may be able to operate without broker registration if they stay inside a narrow set of conditions. That could give wallet and interface developers room to keep building, but the relief is temporary, staff-level only, and far short of a permanent rewrite of SEC rules.

What the SEC actually issued

In an April 13, 2026 staff statement, the SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets said it would not object to a Covered User Interface Provider creating, offering, or operating a covered interface without broker-dealer registration under Exchange Act Section 15(b), so long as the provider satisfies the statement’s conditions.

The same staff statement says it is not a rule, regulation, guidance, or Commission statement, has no legal force or effect, and, absent Commission action, will be withdrawn five years from April 13, 2026. That means the SEC has offered an interim no-objection view, not a Commission-approved proposed rule.

Staff Statement Sunset
5 years
That sunset underscores the key editorial point: this is temporary staff relief, not a permanent Commission rule change.

That distinction cuts both ways. The staff view may lower immediate registration pressure for some self-custodial products, but the linked five-year sunset also tells firms they still need to plan for the possibility that the current posture disappears unless the Commission acts.

Which interfaces qualify for relief

The SEC statement defines a Covered User Interface as a website, browser extension, or software application, including one embedded in a wallet, that helps users prepare user-initiated crypto asset securities transactions through a self-custodial wallet. The functional test matters more than marketing labels, because the document focuses on what the interface actually does.

The relief is also narrow because the statement lays out 12 conditions for providers that want the staff’s no-objection position. Among other limits, the provider cannot solicit specific crypto asset securities transactions and cannot describe execution routes with promotional language such as “best price” or “most reliable,” according to the SEC text.

Conditions Listed for Covered Interfaces
12
The relief is narrow: providers must meet a 12-part checklist covering objective routing, compensation limits, and other operational constraints.

The checklist also points to a practical boundary between interface software and broker-like activity. Because the 12-part framework emphasizes objective routing and compensation limits tied to the user, firms may need to rethink features that look like payment-for-order-flow economics or execution marketing.

Why crypto firms still do not have a final answer

Commissioner Hester M. Peirce said the staff view was helpful, but argued that current crypto markets need a more permanent approach to the broker definition. Her response underlines why the linked 12 conditions and five-year sunset are not a permanent answer.

“Crypto is forcing the Commission to confront its inner demons that have driven it toward ever more expansive readings of the securities laws.”

Hester M. Peirce, commenting on the Division of Trading and Markets statement

For developers and platforms, the operational takeaway is specific. The linked 12 conditions mean interface design now carries compliance consequences, a point that matters as crypto infrastructure companies expand products, including Coinwy’s coverage of Broadridge’s crypto platform launch in Canada.

Because the SEC relief is bounded by the linked 12 conditions and five-year sunset, the immediate market effect is more likely to be selective compliance relief than a sector-wide reset. That measured read fits a backdrop where regulation still shares the stage with macro and company-specific narratives, including Coinwy’s reports on Iran deal hopes lifting market sentiment and Bitmine’s expanding ETH treasury strategy.

The SEC also invited comments under File No. 4-894, giving firms a direct channel to press for clearer boundaries around self-custodial interfaces. Unless the Commission turns that process into a broader rule change, the current no-objection position is scheduled to expire on April 13, 2031.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment or legal advice.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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