- Russia plans to widen crypto access using a tiered investor system.
- Retail investors face caps, while professionals get broader access with restrictions.
- The framework could be finalized by mid-2026, with enforcement in 2027.
The Bank of Russia has outlined a new approach to crypto regulation that would cautiously open the market to more participants while keeping strict safeguards firmly in place. In a concept paper released Tuesday, the central bank proposed allowing both retail and professional investors to acquire digital assets, but under a tiered system designed to limit risk and maintain oversight.

Tiered Access for Retail and Professional Investors
Under the proposal, retail investors would gain limited access to crypto markets, restricted to the most liquid digital assets. Their annual purchases would be capped at 300,000 rubles and must be made through a single intermediary, with testing requirements introduced to ensure basic understanding of the risks involved.
Professional investors, by contrast, would face no transaction limits. However, they would be prohibited from buying anonymous cryptocurrencies, reflecting the regulator’s ongoing focus on transparency and compliance.
Crypto Still Viewed as High Risk
Despite the broader access, the central bank reiterated its cautious stance on digital assets. The proposal emphasizes that crypto remains high risk due to price volatility, lack of sovereign backing, and exposure to sanctions-related risks. While cryptocurrencies and stablecoins would be recognized as monetary assets that can be bought and sold, their use for domestic payments inside Russia would remain banned.

Licensed Infrastructure Remains Central
All crypto transactions would continue to flow through existing licensed infrastructure, including exchanges, brokers, and trustees. The framework also introduces additional requirements for specialized crypto depositories and exchangers, tightening supervision over custody and settlement processes.
Beyond crypto, the proposal extends to digital financial assets. The central bank said DFAs and other Russian digital rights could circulate on open networks as part of an effort to attract foreign capital and expand cross-border participation.
Timeline for Implementation
The Bank of Russia has submitted proposed legislative amendments to the government for review. It aims to finalize the legal framework by July 1, 2026. Liability provisions targeting illegal activity by crypto intermediaries would come into force a year later, on July 1, 2027, giving market participants time to adapt.











