What Regulators Actually Expect From Crypto Compliance Programs in 2026
Based on enforcement patterns, not just written guidance In 2026, crypto compliance programs are no longer evaluated based on what is written. They are evaluated
Last Wednesday, Governor Gavin Newsom signed AB 1029 into law. It didn’t make big headlines. Crypto Twitter was too busy reacting to presidential polls, stablecoin rumors, and some ETF filings.
But this was a major win for transparency, accountability—and crypto legitimacy.
If you blinked, you might’ve missed it. But BitAML didn’t. And neither did our Founder & President, Joe Ciccolo, who also serves as Executive Director of the California Blockchain Advocacy Coalition (CBAC). Back in March, CBAC submitted one of the first and strongest letters of support for AB 1029.
Let’s start with the basics. The Political Reform Act of 1974 requires California public officials to file detailed financial disclosures (Form 700) covering their investments, income sources, and real estate holdings.
Until now, that list of assets and investments didn’t include crypto.
AB 1029, authored by Assemblymember Valencia, updates that law for the digital age. Starting January 1, 2027, public officials and candidates for certain public offices must disclose cryptocurrency holdings over $2,000—the same threshold that already applies to stocks.
According to CalMatters’ legislative tracking system, AB 1029 formally expands the definition of “investment” under the Political Reform Act to include a digital financial asset, and specifically mandates crypto disclosure starting in 2027
*Read an in depth report about AB 1029 at Calmatters.com
Why does that matter? Because it affirms what many in the industry have been saying for years: crypto is a mainstream financial asset and should be treated with the same transparency standards as stocks, bonds, and real estate.
This is a narrowly scoped, transparency‑ and crypto‑friendly update that closes a loophole in existing law—without creating a burdensome new regulatory regime.
BitAML’s Joe Ciccolo wears two hats. In addition to leading our compliance advisory firm, he helps shape crypto regulatory and public policy in California through CBAC, a 501(c)(6) trade association advocating for the blockchain, crypto, and Web3 industry.
As early as March 2025, CBAC voiced strong support for AB 1029 in an open letter submitted to lawmakers. That letter didn’t just say “yes”—it laid out the why:
Joe himself put it plainly in his LinkedIn post the day the bill was signed:
AB 1029 isn’t the end of the story. California is exploring:
If you’re a crypto startup operating in California, this is a moment to pay attention. The rules are being written—and the people writing them are listening.
Last week, California made a quiet but meaningful move toward ethical innovation. AB 1029 helps crypto grow, innovate, and thrive through transparency. It’s thoughtful, forward-looking regulation.
Wondering how policy wins like AB 1029 could influence your governance or compliance model? Let’s explore how to future-proof your startup while regulations evolve. Schedule a free discovery call with BitAML.
Based on enforcement patterns, not just written guidance In 2026, crypto compliance programs are no longer evaluated based on what is written. They are evaluated
While much of the digital asset industry remains focused on the latest developments surrounding the CLARITY Act and federal market structure negotiations in Washington D.C.,
Stablecoins were supposed to be the boring part of crypto. No wild price swings. No moon charts. No “number go up” fever dreams. Just digital