The most comprehensive crypto regulatory bill in US history is racing against a deadline that’s now uncomfortably close. The White House wants the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, better known as the CLARITY Act, signed into law by July 4, and lawmakers say they’re optimistic.
The bill, which would finally draw clear jurisdictional lines between the SEC and the CFTC over digital assets, has already cleared its biggest legislative test. It passed the House on July 17, 2025, with a 294-134 vote, a margin that qualifies as genuinely bipartisan by modern congressional standards. The Senate Banking Committee advanced it on May 14, 2026. Now comes the hard part: getting the full Senate to agree on final language while navigating a minefield of ethics concerns.
What the CLARITY Act actually does
The CLARITY Act addresses the SEC-CFTC jurisdictional dispute by creating a classification framework. Digital assets deemed “ancillary assets” would fall under SEC oversight as securities. Other digital commodities would land under the CFTC’s jurisdiction. The idea is to give projects and exchanges a clear path to compliance rather than the current approach of regulation-by-enforcement.
Representative French Hill introduced the bill on May 29, 2025. It represents the next logical step after the GENIUS Act, which established a regulatory framework specifically for stablecoins and passed in 2025.






