Crypto Law Profile

Texas Virtual Currency Kiosk Regulation (SB 1705)

Texas SB 1705 would have regulated virtual currency kiosks through registration, disclosures, reporting, fraud controls, transaction limits, ID checks, customer service, and enforcement. It expired after the 2025 regular session.

Texas, U.S. Expired Bill

At a glance

Status Expired after the 2025 regular session without final House passage.
Scope Would have applied to virtual currency kiosks and operators located in Texas.
Regulator Texas Department of Banking would have registered kiosks and enforced Chapter 161.
Consumer Controls Proposed disclosures, ID scans, 72-hour first-customer hold, fee cap, and receipts.

Bill details

Bill number
SB 1705
Session
2025 89th Regular Session
Chamber
Senate
Legislative stage
Chamber 2

Action

Last action
Placed on House General State Calendar; no final House passage before the regular session ended.
Last action date
May 27, 2025

Sponsor

Primary sponsor
Sen. Tan Parker
Sponsor party
Republican
Co-sponsors
Coauthors: Sen. César J. Blanco and Sen. Donna Campbell. House sponsor: Rep. Mihaela Plesa.

Source

Source provider
State legislature
Source ID
89R SB1705
State legislature
Official bill page

Overview

Status: Expired. Texas Senate Bill 1705, titled “relating to the regulation of virtual currency kiosks; providing an administrative penalty,” was a 2025 Texas proposal to create a dedicated state framework for crypto ATM-style terminals. The measure would have added Chapter 161 to Subtitle E, Title 3 of the Texas Finance Code. It did not become operative law. Texas Legislature Online lists the bill’s last action as placement on the House General State Calendar on May 27, 2025, and the 89th Regular Session ended June 2, 2025 without final enactment.

Texas virtual currency kiosk regulation overview

SB 1705 targeted “virtual currency kiosks,” defined in the House Committee Report text as electronic terminals used to facilitate exchange of virtual currency for money, bank credit, or other virtual currency. The proposal covered operators that engage in virtual currency business activity through a kiosk located in Texas or own, operate, or manage a kiosk through which that activity is offered.

The bill’s policy focus was consumer protection, fraud prevention, and regulatory visibility. Its official bill analysis cited law-enforcement concerns that cryptocurrency ATMs can be used in fraud schemes, money laundering, and other illicit activity, while presenting the bill as a response involving registration, reporting, disclosures, fraud controls, transaction limits, and fee limits.

Key provisions in SB 1705

Registration and reporting

The House Committee Report version would have required a virtual currency kiosk operator to register each kiosk with the Texas Department of Banking and obtain prior department approval before activation. Operators also would have had to file quarterly reports with kiosk location details, operating dates, trade names, and virtual currency addresses associated with each kiosk.

Disclosures, receipts, and customer acknowledgments

The proposal would have required clear material-risk disclosures before transactions, including warnings that virtual currency is not legal tender, may not be government-backed or insured, and can fluctuate significantly in value. It also would have required transaction-specific disclosures, customer acknowledgment before completion, and physical or digital receipts in the customer’s preferred language.

Fraud controls and transaction limits

SB 1705 would have required blockchain analytics software to help prevent transfers to wallets known to be associated with fraudulent activity. It also would have required a written antifraud policy, a full-time compliance officer, customer ID scanning, registered recipient wallets, and a 72-hour hold for first-time customers. The House Committee Report version would have capped customer transactions at $3,000 in a 24-hour period and limited aggregate fees to the greater of $5 or 12% of the U.S. dollar equivalent involved.

Enforcement structure and regulator role

The proposed framework assigned key duties to the Texas Department of Banking and the banking commissioner, while giving the Finance Commission of Texas rulemaking authority. Enforcement tools would have included registration revocation, cease-and-desist orders, consent orders, emergency orders, administrative penalties of up to $5,000 per violation or per day for continuing violations, and judicial review in Travis County district court for final orders after hearing.

Status and legislative timeline

SB 1705 was filed on Feb. 27, 2025, referred to the Senate Business & Commerce Committee on March 13, reported from committee on May 12, and passed the Senate on May 15. In the House, it was referred to Pensions, Investments & Financial Services, reported favorably on May 22, and placed on the General State Calendar on May 27. Because the bill did not complete final House passage and enactment before the regular session ended, this profile treats it as expired rather than effective Texas regulation.

Related Texas digital asset proposals

Editors should distinguish SB 1705 from HB 2798, a separate House bill on disclosures and requirements for virtual currency kiosk transactions, and from HB 4233, where a Senate floor amendment also proposed virtual-currency-kiosk provisions. This profile focuses on SB 1705 because its caption directly addressed the regulation of virtual currency kiosks and it advanced through both chambers’ committee process.

Key provisions

Kiosk registration and approval

Would prohibit locating or activating a Texas virtual currency kiosk unless registered with and approved by the Department, with quarterly location reporting.

Licensing & Registration Source

Risk disclosures and receipts

Would require clear risk and transaction disclosures, customer acknowledgment before completion, and physical or digital receipts in the customer’s preferred language.

Consumer protection Source

Fraud controls and analytics

Would require blockchain analytics, written antifraud policies, a full-time compliance officer, and evidence of analytics use on request.

AML/CFT Source

Customer checks and transaction limits

Would cap daily transactions at $3,000 per customer, require ID scanning and registered recipient wallets, and impose a 72-hour hold for first-time customers.

Consumer protection Source

Fee cap and customer service

Would cap aggregate fees at the greater of $5 or 12% of the U.S. dollar value and require weekday live customer service from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Payments Source

Enforcement and administrative penalties

Would authorize revocation, cease-and-desist orders, emergency orders, consent orders, rulemaking, and administrative penalties up to $5,000 per violation/day.

Enforcement & Asset Recovery Source

Timeline

  1. Bill filed

    SB 1705 was filed by Sen. Tan Parker for the 89th Regular Session.

    Introduced Source
  2. Senate committee referral

    The bill was read first time and referred to the Senate Business & Commerce Committee.

    In committee Source
  3. Senate committee report

    The Senate committee reported the substituted version favorably.

    In committee Source
  4. Passed Senate

    The Senate passed SB 1705 and reported it engrossed.

    Passed Source
  5. House committee report

    The House Pensions, Investments & Financial Services Committee reported the bill favorably without amendment.

    In committee Source
  6. Placed on House calendar

    SB 1705 was placed on the House General State Calendar, its final listed action.

    Proposed Source
  7. Regular session ended

    The 89th Regular Session ended without final passage or enactment of SB 1705.

    Expired Source

Who it affects

Actors

Finance Commission of Texas, Texas Department of Banking, Texas Legislature

Asset classes

Virtual currency

Official sources

Editorial note

Status mapping: SB 1705 is treated as an expired 2025 bill, not an enacted Texas regulation. The latest official bill text reviewed was the House Committee Report version. The bill proposed a Sept. 1, 2025 effective date if enacted, but no operative law took effect.