summary
Introduced
09/29/2025
09/29/2025
In Committee
09/29/2025
09/29/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
Potential new amendment
2025-2026 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill limits the ability of state agencies and cities, villages, towns, and counties (political subdivisions) to regulate digital assets, including cryptocurrency, and specifies digital asset]related activities in which a person may engage. Under the bill, neither a state agency nor a political subdivision may prohibit or restrict a person in accepting digital assets as a method of payment for legal goods and services or in taking custody of digital assets using a self-hosted wallet or hardware wallet. The bill also specifies that a person in this state may 1) operate a node for the purpose of connecting to a blockchain protocol and participating in the blockchain protocol[s operations; 2) develop software on a blockchain protocol; 3) transfer digital assets to another person utilizing a blockchain protocol; and 4) participate in staking on a blockchain protocol. The bill includes various definitions relating to these provisions. Under current law, the Department of Financial Institutions regulates money transmitters. With exceptions, a person may not engage in the business of money transmission unless the person is licensed by DFI. XMoney transmissionY means selling or issuing payment instruments or stored value, such as checks, money orders, or prepaid cards, to a person located in this state or receiving money for transmission from a person located in this state. XMoneyY is not defined to include virtual currency such as cryptocurrency. This bill creates an additional exception to the regulation of money transmitters to exclude a person engaged in 1) operating a node or a series of nodes on a blockchain; 2) effectuating the exchange of one digital asset for another digital asset if there is no exchange of digital assets for legal tender or bank deposits; 3) developing software on a blockchain, even if the software effectuates the exchange of one digital asset for another digital asset; or 4) digital asset mining or staking or engaging in a digital asset mining business. Under current law, a person may not offer or sell any security in this state unless the security is registered with DFI, the security or transaction is exempt from registration, or the security is a federal covered security. This bill creates an additional transaction exemption related to digital asset staking. The bill exempts a person from various securities-related requirements for providing technical solutions by third-party service providers to allow token owners to earn rewards through staking, not including returns other than rewards paid by the network.
AI Summary
This bill establishes comprehensive regulations for digital assets, primarily focusing on protecting and enabling digital asset activities in Wisconsin. The legislation prevents state agencies and local political subdivisions from prohibiting or restricting certain digital asset-related activities, such as accepting cryptocurrency as payment for goods and services or using self-hosted or hardware wallets to store digital assets. The bill provides detailed definitions for key terms like blockchain (a cryptographically secured, distributed public ledger), digital assets (digital representations of value), and staking (committing digital assets to support a blockchain's operations). It explicitly permits individuals to engage in activities like operating blockchain nodes, developing blockchain software, transferring digital assets, and participating in staking. Additionally, the bill creates exceptions to existing financial regulations, specifically exempting certain blockchain-related activities from money transmission and securities registration requirements. This means that activities like operating blockchain nodes, exchanging digital assets between themselves, developing blockchain software, and mining or staking digital assets will not be subject to the same regulatory scrutiny as traditional financial transactions. The overall aim of the bill appears to be creating a supportive legal environment for digital asset technologies and blockchain innovation in Wisconsin.
Committee Categories
Business and Industry
Sponsors (10)
Russell Goodwin (D)*,
Rick Gundrum (R)*,
Nate Gustafson (R)*,
Dan Knodl (R)*,
Rob Kreibich (R)*,
Scott Krug (R)*,
Adam Neylon (R)*,
Travis Tranel (R)*,
Rachael Cabral-Guevara (R),
Patrick Testin (R),
Last Action
Assembly Amendment 1 offered by Representative Neylon (on 10/31/2025)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2025/proposals/reg/asm/bill/ab471 |
| AB471 ROCP for Committee on Financial Institutions | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2025/related/records/assembly/financial_institutions/1961299.pdf |
| Assembly Amendment 1 | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/document/amends/2025/REG/AB471-AA1.pdf |
| BillText | https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/document/proposaltext/2025/REG/AB471.pdf |
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