---
title: "US regulators miss the GENIUS Act deadline for final stablecoin rules"
description: "The GENIUS Act gave federal regulators one year to write final rules for dollar stablecoins. That year ran out on Saturday with every major rule still a proposal, while the law's January 2027 effective date has not moved."
category: "Crypto"
category_url: https://boursel.com/category/crypto
author: "Rafael Ortiz"
published: 2026-07-18T22:58:00.000Z
updated: 2026-07-18T22:58:00.000Z
canonical: https://boursel.com/article/us-regulators-miss-the-genius-act-deadline-for-final-stablecoin-rules
tags: ["stablecoins", "genius-act", "regulation", "occ", "treasury"]
---
# US regulators miss the GENIUS Act deadline for final stablecoin rules

The GENIUS Act gave federal regulators one year to write final rules for dollar stablecoins. That year ran out on Saturday with every major rule still a proposal, while the law's January 2027 effective date has not moved.

The deadline Congress wrote into America's first federal stablecoin law passed
on Saturday without the rules that were supposed to accompany it.

The Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act, known
as the GENIUS Act, was signed into law on July 18, 2025. It directed federal
regulators to write implementing rules through notice-and-comment rulemaking
no later than one year after enactment. That year expired on July 18, 2026, and
[the agencies involved have issued proposals but no final
rules](https://www.theblock.co/post/408843/us-regulators-miss-genius-acts-one-year-deadline-for-final-stablecoin-rules),
according to The Block.

## What the law was meant to settle

A payment stablecoin is a digital token designed to hold a fixed value, almost
always one US dollar, and to be used for payments and settlement rather than as
a speculative position. The value is meant to be maintained by holding reserves
of safe assets against every token issued.

The GENIUS Act created the first federal regime for these instruments, covering
reserve requirements, redemption rights, disclosure, licensing and supervision
of issuers. The point of the exercise was to answer the questions that repeated
stablecoin failures had exposed: what exactly backs the token, whether a holder
can reliably redeem it at par, and who supervises the issuer.

The statute set out the framework. The rules were supposed to make it
operational: what specifically counts as an eligible reserve asset, what capital
and liquidity an issuer must hold, how custody works, and how supervision is
conducted in practice.

## Proposals, but nothing final

The agencies have not been idle. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
put out a broad implementing proposal on March 2, 2026, covering reserves,
capital, liquidity, custody and risk management. The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation followed with a prudential standards proposal on April 10. The
National Credit Union Administration issued licensing and operational proposals
in February and May. The Treasury Department proposed principles in April for
judging when a state regime is close enough to the federal one to substitute
for it.

Several remain open for comment. A joint proposal on customer identification is
accepting comments through August 21, and an FDIC proposal on Bank Secrecy Act
compliance through August 4. A rule cannot be finalized while its comment period
is still running, which is the mechanical reason the deadline was always going
to be missed.

## Why the delay bites

Missing a rulemaking deadline is common enough in Washington, and Congress
attached no penalty to this one. What makes this case awkward is that the
delay does not move the law's effective date, which remains January 18, 2027.

That leaves issuers roughly six months to build compliance around requirements
whose final text does not exist. Firms preparing to operate under the regime
have to make decisions now, on reserve composition, custody arrangements and
capital, based on proposals that may change before they are finalized. The
larger the operational change a rule implies, the more expensive it is to guess
wrong.

The practical effect falls unevenly. Established issuers with legal and
compliance staff can track dockets and hedge their preparations. Smaller
entrants, and banks weighing whether to issue at all, face a choice between
committing resources against uncertain requirements or waiting and having less
time to comply.

Some obligations do already bite, because they sit in the statute itself rather
than in the pending rules. The requirement to hold reserves against tokens in
issue and to disclose reserve composition applies as a matter of law, whatever
the rulemaking status.

## The stakes

The market these rules will govern is now a substantial part of the plumbing of
crypto trading and, increasingly, of cross-border payments. Stablecoin issuers
have become meaningful holders of short-dated US government debt, which is why
bank regulators and the Treasury have taken an interest that goes beyond
consumer protection.

That is also the argument for getting the rules right rather than fast. The
cost of the delay is uncertainty for firms trying to comply; the cost of a rushed
rule written to hit a date would be borne over a much longer period. What the
agencies do not have is much room left to do either, with the framework becoming
binding in January.

## Sources

- [US regulators miss GENIUS Act's one-year deadline for final stablecoin rules](https://www.theblock.co/post/408843/us-regulators-miss-genius-acts-one-year-deadline-for-final-stablecoin-rules)

