Originally published by GOV.UK on 2025-12-15
Co nowe ramy regulacyjne dotyczące kryptowalut w Wielkiej Brytanii oznaczają dla inwestorów
Rząd Wielkiej Brytanii przedstawił kompleksowe ramy regulacyjne dla kryptoaktywów, które wejdą w życie w 2027 roku. Wyjaśniamy, co oznaczają one dla traderów, platform oraz szerszego ekosystemu aktywów cyfrowych w Wielkiej Brytanii.
In December 2025, HM Treasury announced what could be the most significant shift in UK financial regulation since the post-2008 reforms: a comprehensive regulatory framework for cryptoasset firms, bringing them under the full oversight of the Financial Conduct Authority. The move signals that the UK no longer intends to stand by as other jurisdictions compete to set the rules for digital finance.
What the new framework actually requires
At its core, the new regime requires crypto firms to meet the same standards already expected of traditional financial services providers. That means proper authorization, transparent fee structures, robust asset custody solutions, and clear complaints procedures. Chancellor Rachel Reeves described the rules as "critical" to maintaining the UK's position as a "world-leading financial hub in the digital age" — wording that suggests the government views crypto regulation not as a burden on innovation, but as a prerequisite for institutional trust.
Why it matters for individual investors
For retail investors operating in the UK market, the practical implications are significant. The days of navigating an unregulated landscape — where a platform's collapse could wipe out funds with no path to recourse — are coming to an end. Once the framework takes effect in October 2027, every cryptoasset firm serving UK customers will need FCA authorization — the same stamp of approval required of banks, investment firms, and insurance companies.
This does not eliminate investment risk, of course. Crypto markets will remain volatile, and no regulatory framework can guarantee returns. What it does mean is that the firms enabling these investments will be held accountable: proper segregation of client assets, mandatory risk disclosures, and real enforcement powers when something goes wrong.
Source: GOV.UK