The Property (Digital Assets etc.) Act 2025 received royal assent on December 2, 2025, and formally establishes that digital assets, including cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, tokenized securities, and NFTs, are capable of being treated as a distinct category of personal property under the law of England and Wales (with parallel provisions for Northern Ireland).
This landmark legislation creates a long-awaited “third category” of property, sitting alongside traditional “things in possession” (physical objects) and “things in action” (enforceable legal rights such as debts), explicitly confirming that data objects existing only in digital form can be owned, transferred, inherited, and used as collateral.
Background and Legal Significance
The Act directly implements recommendations from the Law Commission of England and Wales’ 2023 final report on Digital Assets, which concluded that existing common-law categories were insufficient for many crypto-native assets. Courts had already begun recognizing crypto as property on a case-by-case basis (most notably in AA v Persons Unknown (2020) regarding Bitcoin ransom recovery), but statutory confirmation removes remaining uncertainty.
Key practical implications include:
Clearer rules for succession and probate: crypto holdings can now be bequeathed in wills and form part of an estate without ambiguity.
Stronger remedies in bankruptcy and insolvency: administrators and liquidators have explicit authority to take control of private keys and wallet contents.
Enhanced theft and fraud recovery: stolen digital assets can be traced and frozen via proprietary injunctions in the same way as misappropriated funds.
Improved collateral status: banks and lenders can more confidently accept tokenized assets as security under English-law finance documents.
Industry and Government Reaction
The UK Cryptoasset Business Council and the Digital Asset Council both welcomed the Act as “world-leading clarity” that will encourage institutional participation. The government stated the reform is a cornerstone of its ambition to make the UK a global hub for digital finance, especially timely given that 12% of British adults now own cryptoassets according to the FCA’s 2025 Consumer Survey.
Law firms note the change will particularly benefit tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) and decentralized finance protocols operating under English law governance, as smart-contract-enforced liens and security interests now have a firmer statutory footing.
Scope and Limitations
The Act is narrowly drafted: it confirms that certain digital assets are capable of being property but does not attempt to classify every type of token. Stablecoins issued by regulated e-money institutions, central bank digital currencies, and purely informational records (e.g., loyalty points with no independent economic value) remain outside the new category in most cases.
Scotland retains its separate legal system and is expected to introduce equivalent legislation in 2026.
In short, the Property (Digital Assets etc.) Act 2025 ends years of legal patchwork and gives the United Kingdom one of the clearest, most crypto-friendly property law frameworks in the G20, a development widely expected to accelerate institutional adoption and innovation in the years ahead.
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UK Officially Recognizes Crypto and NFTs as Personal Property Under New 2025 Law
The Property (Digital Assets etc.) Act 2025 received royal assent on December 2, 2025, and formally establishes that digital assets, including cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, tokenized securities, and NFTs, are capable of being treated as a distinct category of personal property under the law of England and Wales (with parallel provisions for Northern Ireland).
This landmark legislation creates a long-awaited “third category” of property, sitting alongside traditional “things in possession” (physical objects) and “things in action” (enforceable legal rights such as debts), explicitly confirming that data objects existing only in digital form can be owned, transferred, inherited, and used as collateral.
Background and Legal Significance
The Act directly implements recommendations from the Law Commission of England and Wales’ 2023 final report on Digital Assets, which concluded that existing common-law categories were insufficient for many crypto-native assets. Courts had already begun recognizing crypto as property on a case-by-case basis (most notably in AA v Persons Unknown (2020) regarding Bitcoin ransom recovery), but statutory confirmation removes remaining uncertainty.
Key practical implications include:
Industry and Government Reaction
The UK Cryptoasset Business Council and the Digital Asset Council both welcomed the Act as “world-leading clarity” that will encourage institutional participation. The government stated the reform is a cornerstone of its ambition to make the UK a global hub for digital finance, especially timely given that 12% of British adults now own cryptoassets according to the FCA’s 2025 Consumer Survey.
Law firms note the change will particularly benefit tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) and decentralized finance protocols operating under English law governance, as smart-contract-enforced liens and security interests now have a firmer statutory footing.
Scope and Limitations
The Act is narrowly drafted: it confirms that certain digital assets are capable of being property but does not attempt to classify every type of token. Stablecoins issued by regulated e-money institutions, central bank digital currencies, and purely informational records (e.g., loyalty points with no independent economic value) remain outside the new category in most cases.
Scotland retains its separate legal system and is expected to introduce equivalent legislation in 2026.
In short, the Property (Digital Assets etc.) Act 2025 ends years of legal patchwork and gives the United Kingdom one of the clearest, most crypto-friendly property law frameworks in the G20, a development widely expected to accelerate institutional adoption and innovation in the years ahead.