Crypto Law Profile

California DFAL Stablecoin Amendments

California amendments to DFAL that delay licensing and stablecoin operative dates to July 1, 2026, add monthly compliance records, and allow DFPI-approved stablecoins subject to conditions.

California, United States Enacted Amendment Jul 1, 2026

At a glance

Status Enacted Sept. 29, 2024; operative July 1, 2026.
Regulator DFPI commissioner approves, conditions, and may revoke stablecoin approvals.
Stablecoin Scope Covers exchange, transfer, storage, or administration of stablecoins for residents.
Records Adds monthly compliance-report records tied to stablecoin conditions.

Bill details

Bill number
AB 1934
Session
2023-2024
Chamber
Assembly
Legislative stage
Enacted

Action

Last action
Chaptered by Secretary of State as Chapter 945, Statutes of 2024.
Last action date
Sep 29, 2024

Sponsor

Primary sponsor
Assemblymember Tim Grayson

Source

Source provider
State legislature
Source ID
202320240AB1934 / Ch. 945
State legislature
Official bill page

Overview

California Digital Financial Assets Law Stablecoin Amendments refers to AB 1934, Chapter 945, Statutes of 2024, which amended California’s Digital Financial Assets Law (DFAL) stablecoin and implementation provisions. The amendments were approved and chaptered on Sept. 29, 2024. As of June 4, 2026, the relevant DFAL stablecoin provisions are enacted but scheduled to become operative on July 1, 2026. The state regulator is the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI).

California DFAL Stablecoin Scope

The underlying DFAL was created by AB 39 and is codified in Division 1.25 of the California Financial Code. It establishes a licensing and supervisory framework for digital financial asset business activity with or on behalf of California residents. DFAL defines a digital financial asset as a digital representation of value used as a medium of exchange, unit of account, or store of value, and not legal tender, subject to statutory exclusions. It also includes exchanging, transferring, storing, and digital financial asset administration within covered business activity.

For stablecoins, DFAL uses a specific definition: a digital financial asset pegged to the U.S. dollar or another national currency and marketed in a way intended to create a public expectation that its nominal value will remain effectively fixed. The original DFAL stablecoin chapter required issuer status and eligible-securities backing, subject to a commissioner approval pathway. AB 1934 updates the implementation date and clarifies the approval-based route for covered stablecoin activity.

Stablecoin Approval by the DFPI Commissioner

AB 1934 provides that a covered person may exchange, transfer, or store a stablecoin, or engage in digital financial asset administration of that stablecoin, directly or through a digital financial asset control services vendor, if the stablecoin is approved by the commissioner and the covered person complies with any commissioner-imposed requirements, restrictions, or prohibitions.

The commissioner may approve a stablecoin for covered activities if the commissioner determines that it does not compromise the interests of residents who may use it as payment for goods and services or as a store of value. AB 1934 directs the commissioner to consider legally enforceable holder rights, including redemption rights; the amount, nature, and quality of issuer assets available for redemption; risks related to how those assets are owned or held; representations about potential uses; representations about risks; and any other material factors.

Conditions, Revocation, and Records

The amendments preserve broad DFPI discretion around approved stablecoins. As a condition of approval, the commissioner may require the stablecoin issuer to obtain a DFAL license and may impose additional requirements, restrictions, or prohibitions on either the issuer or the covered person that exchanges, transfers, stores, or administers the approved stablecoin.

The commissioner must revoke approval if, after notice and a reasonable opportunity to be heard, the issuer markets the stablecoin in a way that may create a reasonable public expectation that the stablecoin poses no more risk than bank credit or a stored-value product issued by a California Money Transmission Act licensee. The commissioner also may revoke approval based on changes in covered-person or issuer activities, market conditions, or violations of applicable requirements.

AB 1934 also adds a recordkeeping amendment relevant to stablecoin compliance. Licensees must maintain required records for five years and, if applicable, maintain at least monthly a report demonstrating compliance with Section 3601. DFPI’s October 2024 bulletin described AB 1934 as adding a monthly report showing stablecoin issuer compliance with DFAL stablecoin reserve requirements.

Status, Implementation, and Jurisdictional Impact

DFPI’s FAQ states that AB 39 and SB 401 together comprise DFAL, and that AB 1934 extended the licensing date from July 1, 2025 to July 1, 2026. DFPI began accepting online DFAL license applications through NMLS on March 9, 2026. Separately, DFPI’s PRO 02-23 rulemaking page reported Office of Administrative Law disapproval of proposed DFAL regulations on May 12, 2026; that rulemaking status does not change the enacted statutory text summarized here.

This is a California state-law profile within the United States. It does not cover federal stablecoin law, federal securities or commodities classification, money transmission requirements outside California, or every DFAL chapter. It is most relevant to stablecoin issuers, exchanges, custodians, control-services vendors, and other covered persons that may exchange, transfer, store, or administer stablecoins with or on behalf of California residents.

Key provisions

Operative licensing date

Extends the DFAL licensing and related operative dates from July 1, 2025 to July 1, 2026.

Licensing & Registration Jul 1, 2026 Source

Stablecoin approval pathway

Allows covered persons to exchange, transfer, store, or administer approved stablecoins if commissioner conditions are met.

Stablecoins Jul 1, 2026 Source

Approval factors

Commissioner review considers redemption rights, reserve asset quality, reserve risks, issuer representations, and other material factors.

Consumer protection Jul 1, 2026 Source

Issuer and covered-person conditions

The commissioner may require issuer licensure and impose requirements, restrictions, or prohibitions on issuers or covered persons.

Licensing & Registration Jul 1, 2026 Source

Misleading risk marketing revocation

Approval must be revoked if issuer marketing suggests the stablecoin has no more risk than bank credit or licensed stored value.

Disclosure & Marketing Jul 1, 2026 Source

Monthly compliance record

Licensees must maintain, where applicable, a monthly report demonstrating compliance with DFAL stablecoin conditions.

Taxation & Reporting Jul 1, 2026 Source

Public approval listing

If the commissioner approves a stablecoin, DFPI must make the approval available on the department website.

Disclosure & Marketing Jul 1, 2026 Source

Timeline

  1. DFAL created by AB 39

    California chaptered AB 39, adding Division 1.25, the Digital Financial Assets Law, to the Financial Code.

    Passed Source
  2. AB 1934 chaptered

    AB 1934 was approved by the Governor and chaptered as Chapter 945, Statutes of 2024.

    Passed Source
  3. DFPI confirms implementation extension

    DFPI bulletin summarized AB 1934 as delaying the DFAL operative licensing date to July 1, 2026.

    Published Source
  4. DFAL applications opened

    DFPI began accepting online DFAL license applications through NMLS.

    Published Source
  5. PRO 02-23 disapproved by OAL

    DFPI rulemaking page reported Office of Administrative Law disapproval of proposed DFAL regulations.

    Published Source

Who it affects

Actors

California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, California Governor, California Legislature

Asset classes

Digital assets, Digital financial assets, Stablecoins

Official sources

Editorial note

This profile covers AB 1934 amendments to DFAL stablecoin provisions. It does not cover every DFAL obligation or pending SB 97 amendments.