Crypto Law Profile

Montana HB 263 Digital Asset Mining and Data Center Ratemaking Proposal

Failed 2025 Montana bill that would have required data centers and digital asset mining businesses, excluding home miners, to report prior-year and anticipated electricity use annually to the PSC and legislative interim committee.

Montana, U.S. Expired Bill

At a glance

Status House bill failed after dying in process on May 20, 2025.
Proposed reports Covered data centers and digital mining businesses would report annual electricity use.
Home mining Home digital asset mining would be excluded from the new reporting requirement.
Current law MCA § 69-3-332 still bars unduly discriminatory mining rate classes.

Bill details

Bill number
HB 263
Session
2025 Regular Session
Chamber
House
Legislative stage
Failed

Action

Last action
(H) Died in Process
Last action date
May 20, 2025

Sponsor

Primary sponsor
Katie Sullivan
Sponsor party
Democratic

Source

Source provider
LegiScan
Source ID
MT HB263 2025
State legislature
Official bill page

Overview

Montana House Bill 263 was a 2025 proposal to revise digital asset mining and data center ratemaking laws. The bill did not become law: bill-tracking records list HB 263 as failed after the House action “Died in Process” on May 20, 2025. If enacted, HB 263 would have amended Montana Code Annotated § 69-3-332 by adding annual electricity-use reporting for certain data centers and digital mining businesses.

Montana HB 263 status

HB 263 was introduced in the Montana House during the 69th Legislature’s 2025 regular session by Rep. Katie Sullivan. The proposal was referred to the House Energy, Technology and Federal Relations Committee, received a hearing, and was tabled in committee on Feb. 3, 2025. It missed the general bill transmittal deadline on March 12 and died in process on May 20.

Because the bill failed, the proposed reporting requirement and delayed effective date did not take effect. The current Montana digital asset mining ratemaking statute remains MCA § 69-3-332, which states that the Public Service Commission may not establish a rate classification for digital asset mining, digital asset mining businesses, or home digital asset mining that creates unduly discriminatory rates.

Proposed electricity-use reporting for data centers and digital mining

HB 263 would have changed the heading of § 69-3-332 to “Digital asset mining and data center ratemaking — reporting requirement.” The proposed amendment would have required any data center or digital mining business operating in Montana, excluding home digital asset mining, to submit annual electricity-use information by March 1.

The reports would have gone to two state bodies: the Montana Public Service Commission and the Energy and Telecommunications Interim Committee. Covered entities would have reported total megawatt-hours of electricity consumed in the previous calendar year and anticipated megawatt-hours needed for the current calendar year.

Scope and definitions

The proposal incorporated existing definitions in § 69-3-332. “Digital asset mining” is defined in current Montana law as using electricity to power a computer for the purpose of securing a blockchain network. A “digital asset mining business” is a group of computers at a single site consuming more than 1 megawatt of energy on an average annual basis for the purpose of generating digital assets by securing a blockchain network.

HB 263 also used the current statutory definition of “data center,” which covers a building or premises mainly occupied by computers, telecommunications, or related equipment, including supporting equipment, where information is processed, transferred, and stored. The reporting proposal expressly excluded home digital asset mining, which current law describes as residential mining that consumes less than 1 megawatt on an average annual basis.

Relationship to Montana’s mining framework

HB 263 would have operated within Montana’s broader digital asset mining framework adopted in 2023. That framework includes the ratemaking provision in § 69-3-332 and a separate zoning provision, MCA § 76-2-1003, limiting local restrictions on digital asset mining businesses and home digital asset mining.

The failed 2025 proposal did not repeal Montana’s existing mining protections. Instead, it would have added an electricity-demand reporting layer for larger compute facilities while preserving the statutory language against unduly discriminatory digital asset mining rate classifications. Editors should note a drafting ambiguity: the reporting subsection uses the phrase “digital mining business,” while the definitions section uses “digital asset mining business.”

Why the proposal matters for crypto law tracking

HB 263 is relevant for tracking state-level crypto mining policy because it shows how lawmakers may combine digital asset mining law with large-load utility oversight and data center energy disclosure. The bill’s failure means it is a historical proposal rather than an operative compliance regime. Any future Montana proposal should be reviewed separately against its own introduced text, committee actions, and enacted status.

Key provisions

Annual reporting duty

Would require covered data centers and digital asset mining businesses operating in Montana to report electricity-use data by March 1 each year.

Reporting Source

Electricity-use data points

Reports would include prior-year total megawatt-hours consumed and anticipated megawatt-hours needed for the current year.

Energy use Source

State recipients

Reports would be submitted to the Montana Public Service Commission and the Energy and Telecommunications Interim Committee.

State oversight Source

Home mining carveout

The annual reporting proposal expressly excluded home digital asset mining.

Mining Source

Ratemaking guardrail retained

The bill retained the existing ban on unduly discriminatory rate classifications for digital asset mining uses.

Ratemaking Source

Delayed effective date proposed

If enacted, the bill would have taken effect March 1, 2026; because it failed, no effective date applies.

Effective date Source

Timeline

  1. Introduced in House

    HB 263 was introduced in the Montana House.

    Introduced Source
  2. Referred to committee

    The bill was referred to House Energy, Technology and Federal Relations.

    In committee Source
  3. Committee hearing

    The House committee held a hearing on the bill.

    In committee Source
  4. Tabled in committee

    The House committee tabled the bill; the motion passed 12-2.

    In committee Source
  5. Missed transmittal deadline

    HB 263 missed the general bill transmittal deadline.

    Expired Source
  6. Died in process

    The House bill died in process and was listed as failed.

    Expired Source

Who it affects

Actors

Energy and Telecommunications Interim Committee, Montana Legislature, Montana Public Service Commission, Rep. Katie Sullivan

Asset classes

Digital assets

Official sources

Editorial note

HB 263 did not become law. It is profiled for historical tracking because it would have amended MCA § 69-3-332 to add annual electricity-use reporting for data centers and digital asset mining businesses.