CLARITY Act advances in U.S. Senate committee

The U.S. Senate Banking Committee approved the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act on May 14, 2026, in a 15-9 vote that sends the crypto market-structure bill to the full Senate for debate. The legislation would redraw the regulatory boundary between the SEC and CFTC and enshrine self-custody protections into federal law.

What the Senate Banking Committee approved

Sen. Mike Crapo’s office confirmed the bipartisan committee vote that advanced the CLARITY Act past its first major legislative hurdle. The 15-9 margin included support from both Republican and Democratic members.

Senate Banking Committee Vote
15-9
Committee approval on May 14, 2026 sent the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act to the full Senate for consideration.

This was committee approval, not final enactment. The bill must still pass the full Senate, clear the House of Representatives, and receive a presidential signature before becoming law.

The committee action represents the furthest any comprehensive crypto market-structure bill has advanced in the Senate. It follows years of jurisdictional uncertainty that has left digital-asset firms navigating overlapping and sometimes contradictory guidance from federal regulators.

How the CLARITY Act would reshape crypto oversight

The bill’s central aim is drawing clearer lines between SEC and CFTC jurisdiction over digital assets. Under the current system, companies often cannot determine which agency oversees their products, a problem that has led to enforcement-first regulation rather than proactive rulemaking.

The CLARITY Act would establish compliance standards for spot-market intermediaries, the exchanges, brokers, and custodians that handle digital-asset trading outside the derivatives market. These entities would face defined registration and disclosure requirements instead of relying on informal guidance.

One provision likely to draw particular attention from crypto holders is the self-custody protection language. The draft text states that agencies may not prohibit a person from holding digital assets in a self-hosted wallet. For users who prefer non-custodial solutions, as many in the stablecoin ecosystem do, this would mark the first explicit federal safeguard for self-custody rights.

The SEC-CFTC framework also matters for institutions entering the space. Banks like Intesa Sanpaolo, which has built significant crypto exposure, and firms like SBI and Rakuten developing crypto investment trusts, would benefit from clearer regulatory boundaries when structuring compliant products.

Why the vote matters and what could still block the bill

Democratic senators Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks voted to move the bill out of committee but signaled concerns about the final product, according to Reuters reporting. Their support was enough to clear the committee but does not guarantee they will back the bill on the Senate floor without amendments.

Coin Center’s Peter Van Valkenburgh offered a cautiously positive assessment after the markup.

“What remains is a workable and principled compromise.”

— Peter Van Valkenburgh, Coin Center

That framing acknowledges trade-offs were made during markup. The surviving bill reflects negotiated positions rather than any single stakeholder’s ideal outcome.

The remaining legislative path is long. Full Senate passage would require scheduling floor time and surviving potential amendments or filibuster threats. Even if the Senate passes the bill, the House would need to take up its own version or adopt the Senate text, then reconcile any differences before sending final legislation to the president.

Bitcoin traded near $76,925 around the time of the committee vote, with the broader Fear & Greed Index sitting at 28, in “Fear” territory. The regulatory milestone did not produce an immediate market rally, though structural legislation typically affects sentiment over months rather than days.

Bitcoin Market Benchmark
$76,925
Used as market context only: the benchmark price comes from the research snapshot, while the linked source is a readable public Bitcoin market page rather than a raw API endpoint.

The CLARITY Act’s next test is whether Senate leadership schedules a floor vote before the legislative calendar fills with other priorities. If the bill clears the Senate, it would create pressure on the House to act, potentially setting up the first comprehensive federal crypto market-structure law.

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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Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
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