Cryptoassets Law Guide

Cryptoassets Law Guide

02 Jun 2026 | 2026 Edition

Free worldwide delivery.

About the Practice Guide

This second edition delivers a comparative analysis of cryptoasset regulation in a rapidly evolving global legal landscape. It covers licensing, promotion, custody, AML, taxation and enforcement, as well as DAOs, smart contracts, insolvency and DeFi. Focused on practical application and regulatory divergence, it provides clear guidance for navigating complexity, risk, and emerging legal trends.

Editors

Brown Rudnick

Brown Rudnick is a leading international law firm that provides exceptional, client-driven service in global litigation, crisis management (restructuring, investigations and special situations), brand and reputation management, life sciences and technology. We advise on high-profile cross-border matters while providing the kind of personal attention to clients that is typically found at boutiques. Our enterprising and tenacious lawyers serve our clients around the globe from offices in key financial centres in the U.S. and the UK, and have been recognised by, among others, Chambers USA, Legal 500, Benchmark Litigation and Law360 for excellence in their fields.

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Introduction

Editors’ Introduction

The conversation around cryptoassets has shifted decisively since the first edition of this guide, two years ago. The question is no longer whether cryptoassets fall within the scope of law, but how effectively legal systems can regulate them without stifling innovation. What was once an experimental market has matured into a complex, globally interconnected ecosystem demanding legal certainty, re...

The conversation around cryptoassets has shifted decisively since the first edition of this guide, two years ago. The question is no longer whether cryptoassets fall within the scope of law, but how effectively legal systems can regulate them without stifling innovation. What was once an experimental market has matured into a complex, globally interconnected ecosystem demanding legal certainty, regulatory coordination, and practical enforcement.

Rather than converging on a single “global crypto hub,” jurisdictions have continued to differentiate themselves by regulatory philosophy and strategic focus. Some have prioritised consumer protection and systemic risk management; others have emphasised flexibility, speed to market, or technological neutrality. The result is a fragmented but increasingly sophisticated global regulatory landscape in which crypto businesses must make deliberate, informed choices about where and how they operate.

In this period, regulation has moved from conceptual classification to operational oversight. Comprehensive crypto-specific regimes are no longer novel, and supervisory authorities are now focused on licensing, governance, market conduct, and enforcement. Courts, too, have become more comfortable engaging with cryptoassets as a matter of property, contract, insolvency, and dispute resolution. Legal analysis has shifted from first principles to application, interpretation, and precedent.

This evolution has underscored the importance of lawyers not merely as interpreters of regulation, but as strategic participants in market development. Legal practitioners are increasingly required to bridge law, technology, and commercial reality, advising on structuring, compliance, cross-border risk, and the interaction between decentralised systems and centralised legal accountability.

At the same time, blockchain technology has continued to expand beyond its early associations. Tokenisation of real-world assets, the integration of distributed ledgers into financial market infrastructure, and the growing intersection with artificial intelligence and data governance have further blurred the boundaries between traditional finance and digital innovation. These developments challenge existing legal taxonomies and demand nuanced, jurisdiction-specific analysis.

This Law Over Borders Comparative Guide to Cryptoassets is designed to meet that need. It provides a structured, practical overview of how leading jurisdictions currently approach cryptoassets from both a legislative and judicial perspective. By setting out similarities, divergences, and emerging trends, the guide aims to assist practitioners, businesses, and policymakers in navigating an environment defined by rapid change and regulatory complexity.

As the cryptoassets sector enters its next phase, the law will continue to play a defining role in shaping its credibility, resilience, and long-term viability. The chapters that follow examine these issues across key jurisdictions.

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Contributors

AZB & Partners

AZB & Partners has a prolific and diverse merger control practice and was among the first firms in India to establish a dedicated offering in this space. The firm has advised on some of the earlie...

Brown Rudnick

Brown Rudnick is a leading international law firm that provides exceptional, client-driven service in global litigation, crisis management (restructuring, investigations and special situations), brand...