- The SEC’s 2026 exam priorities remove all mentions of crypto for the first time in years.
- The shift reflects political changes, leadership turnover, and declining enforcement totals.
- Crypto oversight will now run through general rules (custody, AML, disclosures) rather than targeted scrutiny.
The SEC has released its fiscal 2026 “Examination Priorities,” and for the first time in years, crypto is completely absent. No references to crypto, blockchain, digital assets, virtual currencies, or tokenization — not even in AML, fintech, or cybersecurity sections where it previously appeared. This marks a dramatic pivot from 2024 and 2025, when crypto was explicitly named as a top risk area with its own headings and guidance.

The First SEC Priorities List With Zero Mentions of Crypto
The shift is impossible to ignore. The SEC’s new 17-page document instead zeroes in on AI, automated advice tools, algorithmic recommendations, operational resiliency, and identity theft protections. In contrast, crypto — once a centerpiece of the agency’s enforcement messaging — has effectively been removed from the risk map.
This silence coincides with a political and regulatory realignment. The Trump administration’s 2025 directives encouraged the responsible growth of digital assets, paused central bank digital currency efforts, and established a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. At the SEC, Paul Atkins now leads the agency with a pro-capital formation philosophy, while enforcement director Meg Ryan has overseen a dialing back of legacy Gensler-era cases.
A Clear Break From the Gensler Era
Crypto enforcement peaked in 2023 with 46 actions, then slid to 33 in 2024, and has continued dropping under the new leadership. Several high-profile cases have been narrowed or closed entirely — including Ripple, Coinbase, and Robinhood’s crypto unit.
Placed against that backdrop, the SEC’s 2026 priorities read like a deliberate normalization: crypto is no longer treated as a standalone hazard, but instead falls under general rules around custody, complex products, marketing, AML, and operational risk. The agency is no longer signaling special scrutiny of tokens themselves.

What This Means for the Industry
The change comes at a time when Bitcoin has fallen under $90,000, Ethereum is trading below $3,000, and the global crypto market has shed $1 trillion in six weeks — exactly the type of volatility that previously triggered SEC commentary. But exam staff are now expected to evaluate crypto exposure through technology-neutral standards rather than targeted sweeps.
Outside the U.S., however, other jurisdictions are going in the opposite direction:
The EU’s MiCA regime is fully in effect, the UK is drafting explicit crypto activities rules, Hong Kong is expanding its licensed VA framework, and Singapore’s stablecoin standards are already live. That divergence could either push the U.S. toward functional oversight or leave the SEC with a lighter footprint for the next two years.
Looking Ahead
The absence of crypto from the 2026 priorities sets up three likely paths:
- Status quo: benign neglect with fewer enforcement actions and crypto folded into general exam categories.
- Realignment: Congress passes market-structure legislation shifting spot tokens to the CFTC.
- Snap-back: a major market failure forces the SEC to re-add crypto to future priority lists.
For now, the message is unmistakable: for the first time in years, crypto is no longer the SEC’s special project.











