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California has taken a thoughtful—but firm—step toward modernizing ethics law. On July 30, 2025, AB 1029 was officially chaptered into law, amending the state’s landmark Political Reform Act of 1974 to require public officials to disclose digital asset holdings worth $2,000 or more.
Starting January 1, 2027, cryptocurrencies and other “digital financial assets” must be disclosed on Form 700 (the Statement of Economic Interests) by elected officials and public employees who make or influence governmental decisions, placing them on equal footing with traditional assets like stocks and real estate.
Expands the Definition of “Investment”
Until now, California’s ethics rules treated crypto as something outside the traditional category of “investment.” AB 1029 closes that gap by expanding the definition to include digital financial assets, whether held directly or indirectly. In practice, this means crypto is no longer in a gray area—it’s recognized alongside stocks, bonds, and other financial interests.
Makes Crypto Disclosure Mandatory
Public officials—including candidates, elected representatives, and staff covered under conflict-of-interest codes—will now have to list their crypto holdings on Form 700. This isn’t just about paperwork; it ensures decision-makers can’t quietly benefit from policies that affect the value of their tokens. For the crypto industry, this represents a new level of transparency in how policy is shaped.
Updates Conflict-of-Interest Rules
With crypto added to the reporting list, agencies must revise their conflict-of-interest codes to capture digital assets. This keeps ethics policies current with the realities of modern finance and prevents digital holdings from slipping through outdated definitions. The update signals that California sees crypto not as an outlier, but as a legitimate—and potentially influential—asset class in governance.
A New Legal Stake
Failing to disclose an investment has always been risky under the Political Reform Act, but AB 1029 raises the stakes and removes all doubt for those holding digital assets. Omission isn’t just a technical oversight; it could now carry misdemeanor-level consequences. The specific and direct inclusion of digital assets underscores the seriousness with which California expects officials to treat crypto interests moving forward.
— BitAML Founder & President, Joe Ciccolo
When the law was signed, the reaction across the industry was largely supportive. For entrepreneurs, exchanges, trading platforms, and kiosk operators, the takeaway was clear: crypto is finally being treated like other investments. That’s a milestone toward mainstream legitimacy—but it also raises new questions about what these changes might mean for day-to-day business strategy and compliance.
AB 1029 isn’t a sweeping consumer-protection regime or a licensing framework it’s a targeted ethics measure. Here’s what that looks like in practice:
AB 1029 is not the only crypto-related policy California has advanced:
Together, these measures reveal a strategy: normalize crypto in governance (AB 1029), enable its use in government transactions (AB 1180), safeguard unclaimed crypto assets in their native form (SB 822), and regulate its purchase, sale, and exchange (DFAL).
For more on how AB 1029 fits into California’s policy journey, see California’s 2024 Crypto Regulatory Recap, our deep dive into DFAL and the DFPI’s proactive rulemaking.
For crypto businesses, investors, and advisors:
AB 1029 brings overdue clarity to the role of crypto in public governance. It doesn’t stifle innovation—it scaffolds integrity. By requiring disclosure, California is signaling that crypto is not fringe finance—it’s part of the mainstream.
For startups, exchanges, and advisors, the message is clear: transparency is the new table stakes.
If you’re building a crypto business—or advising one—and want to understand how AB 1029 positions you in California’s policy environment, let’s talk. Book a discovery call with BitAML and chart a compliance-first strategy for this new era of transparency.
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