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Wyoming Special Purpose Depository Institutions Act
Wyoming law creating state-chartered, full-reserve special purpose depository institutions for nonlending banking, custody, payment services and related digital-asset activity under Division of Banking oversight.
At a glance
Bill details
- Bill number
- HB0074
- Session
- 2019 General Session
- Chamber
- House
- Legislative stage
- Enacted
Action
- Last action
- Governor signed HEA No. 0047; assigned Chapter 92, Session Laws of Wyoming 2019.
- Last action date
- Feb 26, 2019
Sponsor
- Primary sponsor
- Joint Minerals, Business & Economic Development Interim Committee
- Sponsor party
- Unknown
Source
- Source provider
- State legislature
- Source ID
- 19LSO-0055; Chapter 92
- State legislature
- Official bill page
Overview
The Wyoming Special Purpose Depository Institutions Act is a Wyoming state banking statute codified in Chapter 12 of Title 13 of the Wyoming Statutes. As of June 9, 2026, the Act is effective. The original measure, HB0074, was approved on Feb. 26, 2019, assigned Chapter 92 of the 2019 Session Laws, and made most provisions effective Oct. 1, 2019.
What the Wyoming SPDI Act covers
The Act creates a state-chartered special purpose depository institution, or SPDI, as a Wyoming corporation formed for a limited banking purpose. Current statutory text authorizes SPDIs to conduct nonlending banking business, provide payment services, apply for Federal Reserve System membership, and engage in commissioner-approved incidental activities.
Those incidental activities may include custody, safekeeping, asset servicing, fiduciary powers, investment adviser or broker-dealer activity, commodities-intermediary functions, and taking deposits related to those services. The statute generally prohibits an SPDI from making loans, with narrow exceptions for purchasing specified debt obligations.
Digital asset banking and custody focus
The Wyoming Division of Banking describes Wyoming-chartered SPDIs as fully reserved banks that may receive deposits and conduct incidental activities including custody, asset servicing, and fiduciary asset management. The Division states that SPDIs are likely to focus on digital assets, virtual currencies, digital securities, and digital consumer assets, although the same framework may also support traditional-asset and business-cash-management use cases.
This makes the Act significant for crypto market infrastructure, but it is not solely a crypto statute. Its operative legal structure is a banking charter, with digital-asset activity addressed through custody, asset-servicing, payment, fiduciary, compliance, and supervisory requirements rather than through a standalone token-issuance regime.
Reserve, AML, and depositor protections
The statute requires an SPDI to maintain unencumbered liquid assets valued at not less than 100% of its depository liabilities. Eligible liquid assets include U.S. currency on premises, funds held at a Federal Reserve bank or federally insured financial institution, highly liquid investments, and certain U.S. Treasury or federal agency obligations.
SPDIs must comply with applicable federal law, including anti-money-laundering, customer-identification, and beneficial-ownership requirements. The statute also requires depositor evidence for identity, AML, and beneficial-ownership purposes and imposes disclosure duties when deposits are not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Regulatory oversight and amendments
Wyoming places SPDIs under the supervision of state banking authorities. The statute covers charter applications, public hearing procedures, reports, examinations, supervisory fees, insurance or bond coverage for operational risks, suspension or revocation of authority, and liquidation or continuing jurisdiction after operations end.
The SPDI framework has been amended since enactment. The Wyoming Division of Banking notes amendments in 2020 and 2021, and the legislature later enacted SF0095 in 2025, which addressed conversion of SPDIs into public trust companies, depositor requirements, and related statutory changes.
In 2026, Wyoming enacted SF0055, which modifies SPDI capital, charter-application, business-commencement, supervision-fee, and resolution-fund provisions. The enrolled act states that most 2026 amendments take effect July 1, 2026, while rulemaking and effective-date sections took effect immediately. Editors should re-check the consolidated statute after July 1, 2026, before treating those amendments as fully operative.
Status for CryptoSlate readers
For CryptoSlate’s legal-reference taxonomy, the Wyoming SPDI Act should be classified as an effective U.S. state Act. Its core subject areas are banking access, custody, licensing and registration, payments, and AML/CFT. The Act is best read as a state banking-charter framework for full-reserve, nonlending institutions, including institutions that serve digital-asset markets, rather than as a general permission slip for all crypto activity.
Key provisions
SPDI charter framework
Creates Wyoming-chartered special purpose depository institutions as corporations under Chapter 12 of Title 13.
Nonlending banking powers
Authorizes nonlending banking, payment services and approved incidental activities while generally prohibiting loans.
Custody and asset servicing
Lists custody, safekeeping, asset servicing, fiduciary, investment and commodities-intermediary activities as possible incidental activities.
Full-reserve liquidity
Requires unencumbered liquid assets valued at not less than 100% of depository liabilities.
AML and depositor evidence
Requires compliance with applicable federal law, including AML, customer-identification and beneficial-ownership requirements.
FDIC disclosure
Requires FDIC noninsurance notices and acknowledgments where deposits are not FDIC-insured; FDIC insurance is optional if available.
Reports and examinations
Subjects SPDIs to commissioner reports, examinations, supervisory fees and operational-risk insurance or bond requirements.
Timeline
HB0074 approved
Governor signed HEA No. 0047; bill assigned Chapter 92, Session Laws of Wyoming 2019.
Principal provisions effective
Most of HB0074 took effect; rulemaking authority took effect on approval.
2025 amendments effective
SF0095 addressed SPDI-to-public-trust-company conversion and depositor requirement changes.
2026 amendments signed
SF0055 was signed and assigned Chapter 75, Session Laws of Wyoming 2026.
2026 amendments effective
Most SF0055 amendments take effect; rulemaking and effective-date sections were immediate.
Who it affects
Actors
Wyoming Banking Board, Wyoming Division of Banking, Wyoming State Banking Commissioner
Asset classes
Digital assets, Digital securities, Fiat currency, Virtual currency
Official sources
Editorial note
This profile is a legal-reference summary, not legal advice. Status is date-qualified as of June 9, 2026; editors should re-check the statute after the 2026 SF0055 amendments take effect on July 1, 2026.


