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The GENIUS Act: What It Means for Stablecoin Issuers and AML Compliance

The GENIUS Act: What it Means for Stablecoin Issuers & AML Compliance

Posted on: April 1st, 2026

On July 18, 2025, the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act was signed into law, marking the first comprehensive federal regulatory framework governing payment stablecoins in the United States.

For anti-money laundering (AML)/combating the financing of terrorism (CFT) professionals, fintech executives, and compliance officers, the GENIUS Act is not just crypto legislation. It is a structural expansion of the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) into the stablecoin ecosystem.

At Capital Compliance Experts, we view the GENIUS Act as one of the most consequential compliance developments in digital asset regulation to date.

What Is the GENIUS Act?

The GENIUS Act establishes a federal regulatory regime for payment stablecoins: digital assets designed to maintain a fixed value, typically pegged 1:1 to the U.S. dollar, backed by high-quality, liquid reserve assets.

The law was enacted to:

  • Provide long-awaited regulatory clarity
  • Protect consumers
  • Strengthen anti-money laundering controls
  • Reinforce the global dominance of the U.S. dollar
  • Support U.S. leadership in digital assets

It passed with bipartisan support, reflecting recognition across parties that stablecoins had grown too large to remain lightly regulated.

The GENIUS Act Timeline

  • Signed into Law: July 18, 2025
  • Regulatory Rulemaking Deadline: July 18, 2026
  • Effective Compliance Deadline: January 18, 2027 (or 120 days after final regulations are issued, whichever comes first)

While full regulatory guidance is still being finalized, organizations operating in the stablecoin space should already be preparing their AML/CFT program and compliance frameworks. Waiting until 2027 is not a strategy.

Who Does the GENIUS Act Affect?

Under the GENIUS Act, compliance obligations extend beyond just crypto startups. The Act brings stablecoin issuance firmly within the U.S. financial regulatory perimeter.

Permitted Payment Stablecoin Issuers (PPSIs)

Any entity issuing payment stablecoins to U.S. persons must be licensed and supervised.

  • Federal Qualified Issuers (generally larger issuers, e.g., over $10B outstanding) are supervised at the federal level by regulators such as the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and the Federal Reserve.
  • State Qualified Issuers may operate under approved state regimes, provided standards are substantially similar to federal rules.
  • Foreign Issuers may offer payment stablecoins in the United States if they satisfy the Act’s conditions, including operating under a comparable foreign regulatory regime and complying with applicable U.S. requirements, including lawful order and sanctions-related obligations.

Permitted payment stablecoin issuers are subject to federal laws applicable to U.S. financial institutions relating to economic sanctions, prevention of money laundering, customer identification, and due diligence.

Digital Asset Service Providers

Exchanges, custodians, and platforms that list or facilitate stablecoin transactions may also face restrictions if they support non-compliant issuers. While not the primary target of the Act, they must conduct due diligence and ensure supported stablecoins meet GENIUS Act standards.

If your organization issues, facilitates, custodies, or supports payment stablecoins involving U.S. persons, the GENIUS Act likely applies.

Beginning July 18, 2028, digital asset service providers generally may not offer or sell a payment stablecoin in the United States unless it is issued by a permitted payment stablecoin issuer or by a foreign issuer that satisfies the Act’s conditions.

Core Requirements Under the GENIUS Act

1:1 Reserve Requirements

Issuers must maintain fully backed reserves equal to the outstanding stablecoins in circulation.

Permitted reserve assets include:

  • U.S. dollars
  • Short-term U.S. Treasury bills
  • Other high-quality, liquid assets approved by regulators

This eliminates fractional or algorithmic-backed models for payment stablecoins under U.S. jurisdiction.

Independent Audits and Transparency

Issuers must:

  • Conduct regular independent audits
  • Publish reserve attestations
  • Maintain detailed recordkeeping

This is a major shift from voluntary transparency to mandatory regulatory disclosure.

Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) Coverage

Perhaps the most significant change for compliance professionals:

Stablecoin issuers are explicitly subject to BSA rules and must implement:

Issuers must also have the ability to freeze or block assets tied to illicit activity.

For many fintechs, this transforms them from lightly regulated tech companies into bank-like, licensed and regulated entities.

Consumer Protection Provisions

The Act provides that in the event of issuer insolvency:

  • Stablecoin holders have first-priority claims to reserve assets
  • Reserves must be segregated and bankruptcy-protected

This provision directly addresses consumer losses seen in prior crypto collapses.

The Strategic Intent Behind the Law

The GENIUS Act serves three strategic objectives:

Protect the Dollar’s Global Dominance

By requiring dollar-backed stablecoins to hold U.S. Treasuries and cash equivalents, the Act increases global demand for U.S. sovereign debt.

Strengthen National Security

By bringing stablecoin issuers under the BSA framework, regulators close a major perceived AML gap in digital asset markets.

Encourage Responsible Innovation

Rather than banning stablecoins, Congress chose regulation — allowing compliant innovation to thrive within guardrails.

What This Means for AML & Compliance Teams

From our perspective, the GENIUS Act creates five immediate action items:

  1. AML/CFT program gap analysis. Does your framework meet BSA standards?
  2. The need for a risk assessment specific for stablecoin activity
  3. Transaction monitoring enhancements for blockchain-based transfers
  4. Sanctions screening integration
  5. Governance and independent testing preparation

Issuers that previously relied on minimal compliance controls must now operate at bank-level standards.

The Bottom Line

The GENIUS Act is not simply crypto legislation. It is a modernization of financial crime compliance for the digital-asset era.

By 2027, payment stablecoin issuers must:

  • Be properly licensed
  • Maintain 1:1 liquid reserves
  • Undergo regular audits
  • Operate a robust AML/CFT program
  • Comply with sanctions and enforcement actions

The stablecoin market is no longer the regulatory frontier. It is now part of the formal U.S. financial system.

At Capital Compliance Experts, we regularly work with fintechs, MSBs, and digital asset companies to prepare for compliance with the GENIUS Act and understand what is required.

If your organization issues, or plans to issue, a stablecoin, now is the time to evaluate your AML framework, licensing posture, and internal controls. The regulatory runway is shorter than it appears.

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About the Author

Kyle Oden, CAMS
Kyle Oden, CAMS
Head of Operations

Over 18 years of experience consulting with medium to large clients on their individual compliance needs. Proficient in working with Financial Service Centers, Money Transmitters, Cryptocurrency-related businesses, Casinos, Tribal Entities, Banks and Lenders. In my free time, I enjoy drawing, being active and spending time with my family.

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