The UCC Article 12 Controllable Electronic Records Amendments are the digital-asset portion of the Uniform Commercial Code Amendments (2022), a joint American Law Institute and Uniform Law Commission project. The package adds Article 12 for controllable electronic records, or CERs, and revises Article 9 and related UCC provisions for secured transactions involving certain digital records. As of June 8, 2026, this profile treats the amendments as partially effective because the official text is a uniform-law package for state enactment, not a single nationwide federal statute.
What the UCC CER amendments do
Article 12 creates a commercial-law framework for transfers of property interests in some, but not all, electronic records. The official comments describe the article as technology-neutral: it is meant to apply beyond current distributed ledger or blockchain systems and to future electronic assets whose systems can support the required concept of control.
The amendments do not function as a crypto licensing statute, securities rule, commodities rule, money-transmission law, or tax statute. Instead, they address state commercial-law questions such as how a purchaser may acquire rights in a CER, when a purchaser may take free of competing property claims, and how Article 9 secured-transactions rules interact with digital collateral.
Key provisions for digital assets
Controllable electronic records
A controllable electronic record is an electronic record that can be subjected to control under Article 12. The definition excludes several categories governed elsewhere, including deposit accounts, electronic money, investment property, transferable records, electronic documents of title, and certain Article 9 concepts such as controllable accounts and controllable payment intangibles.
Control and qualifying purchasers
Control is the organizing concept for Article 12. A person generally has control when the relevant record, associated record, or system gives that person the power to obtain substantially all benefits of the record, exclusive power to prevent others from obtaining those benefits, exclusive power to transfer control, and a way to identify itself as holding those powers. A qualifying purchaser is a purchaser that obtains control for value, in good faith, and without notice of a property-right claim.
Take-free rule
Article 12 gives qualifying purchasers a negotiability-style protection. A qualifying purchaser acquires its rights in the controllable electronic record free of a claim of a property right in that record. Filing a financing statement under Article 9 is not notice of a property-right claim for this purpose. The rule is limited to the CER and does not automatically clear claims to every external payment, performance, or property right that may be referenced by the record.
Article 9 secured-transactions revisions
The 2022 amendments also revise Article 9 to address security interests in controllable electronic records, controllable accounts, controllable payment intangibles, and electronic money. These changes connect the Article 12 control concept to perfection and priority rules for security interests in digital collateral.
Status and jurisdictional impact
The ULC project page lists final act materials, an enactment kit, and legislative bill tracking. The ALI states that amendments to UCC Articles 1, 2, 2A, 3, 4, 4A, 5, 7, 8, and 9 and a new Article 12 were approved by ALI and ULC in 2022. Because enactment occurs through state legislation, editors should track adopting states separately and verify each state’s effective date, transition provisions, and any nonuniform changes before creating state-specific child profiles.
Transition and governing-law points
The official text includes transition provisions because the amendments add a new class of property and make extensive Article 9 revisions. It also provides a governing-law waterfall for Article 12 matters, generally looking first to the controllable electronic record’s stated jurisdiction or system rules and, if the listed alternatives do not apply, defaulting to the District of Columbia. These rules are part of the model text and should be checked against each enacting state’s version.