Crypto Law Profile

Russia Draft Criminal Liability for Unlicensed Digital Currency Activity

Russian Bill No. 1209607-8 would create Criminal Code Article 171.7 for unlawfully organizing digital-currency circulation involving large damage or income. It is awaiting first reading; aggravated cases could carry up to seven years’ imprisonment.

Russia In committee Bill

At a glance

Current status Awaiting first reading; the committee backed the bill and the Duma lists it in its approximate July 2026 program.
Proposed offense Unlawful digital-currency circulation involving large damage or income would become a specific criminal offense.
Maximum sentence Aggravated conduct could carry up to seven years’ imprisonment and a possible fine of up to RUB 1 million.
Conditional start date The draft specifies July 1, 2027, only if enacted; no operative effective date currently exists.

Overview

Russian State Duma Bill No. 1209607-8 is a government-sponsored draft that would create a criminal offense for unlawfully organizing digital-currency circulation. Registered on April 17, 2026, it remains pending before the State Duma. On June 18, the responsible committee recommended adoption at first reading and submitted the bill to the State Duma Council. The official record places it in the chamber’s approximate program for July 2026. It is not in force. If enacted without changes to its commencement clause, it would take effect on July 1, 2027.

What the digital currency criminal liability draft would cover

The introduced text and supporting materials would add Article 171.7 to Chapter 22 of the Russian Criminal Code. The proposed offense covers activity that organizes digital-currency circulation in violation of Russian law when the conduct causes large damage to citizens, organizations, or the state, or is associated with income in a large amount.

The government’s explanatory note describes the targeted conduct as organizing digital-currency circulation without required registration or a mandatory special permission or license. It identifies intermediary services involving the accounting or storage of digital currency, purchase and sale transactions, exchanges between types of digital currency, and transfers conducted without the relevant Bank of Russia license.

The criminal provision refers to requirements established elsewhere in Russian law. Its practical reach would therefore depend on the licensing, registration, and service definitions adopted in the wider digital-currency framework.

Proposed penalties and monetary thresholds

For the base offense, the draft provides a fine of RUB 100,000 to RUB 300,000, a fine measured by one to two years of the convicted person’s income, compulsory labor for up to four years, or imprisonment for up to four years. A prison sentence could carry an additional fine of up to RUB 80,000 or up to six months of income.

An aggravated offense would apply when the conduct is committed by an organized group or involves especially large damage or income. The proposed sanctions are compulsory labor for up to five years or imprisonment for up to seven years, potentially accompanied by a fine of up to RUB 1 million or up to five years of income.

  • Large damage or income: more than RUB 3.5 million.
  • Especially large damage or income: more than RUB 13.5 million.

Investigative authority and related legislation

The bill would amend Article 151 of the Criminal Procedure Code. Its explanatory materials state that preliminary investigations would be handled by investigators of the Investigative Committee and the Federal Security Service, with assignment depending on the circumstances specified in the procedural code.

The government developed the criminal bill alongside Bill No. 1194918-8, “On Digital Currency and Digital Rights”. That companion measure is intended to establish the regulatory rules on which the proposed offense would rely, including a framework for licensed digital-currency services. The filing materials identify Federal Law No. 259-FZ as the existing statutory baseline for digital financial assets and digital currency.

Supreme Court objections to the draft

An official Supreme Court opinion dated February 9, 2026, did not support the version reviewed. The court said the explanatory note did not adequately justify a new special offense instead of the existing general offense for unlicensed business activity. It also characterized the proposal as a blanket criminal norm that could not operate separately from the still-developing regulatory framework.

The court also questioned why the draft did not address economic-crime provisions concerning release from criminal liability after compensation for damage and limits on pretrial detention. The opinion refers to proposed Article 171.6, while the introduced bill uses Article 171.7, indicating that the numbering changed before filing.

Status and next steps

As of June 23, 2026, the bill had not received a first-reading vote. Inclusion in an approximate July program does not establish a fixed plenary date or guarantee passage. The State Duma may amend, advance, or reject the proposal, and enacted text could differ from the introduced version. The July 1, 2027 commencement date is therefore conditional, not an operative effective date.

Key provisions

New Criminal Code Article 171.7

Would criminalize organizing digital-currency circulation contrary to Russian law when conduct causes large damage or produces income in a large amount.

Enforcement Source

Covered intermediary services

The explanatory note identifies custody or accounting, purchase and sale, exchange, and transfer services performed without required registration or a Bank of Russia license.

Licensing Source

Base offense sanctions

Would allow fines of RUB 100,000–300,000, income-based fines, compulsory labor for up to four years, or imprisonment for up to four years with a possible additional fine.

Penalties Source

Aggravated offense sanctions

Organized-group conduct or especially large damage or income could carry compulsory labor for up to five years or imprisonment for up to seven years, plus a possible fine.

Penalties Source

Damage and income thresholds

The explanatory note sets the proposed large threshold above RUB 3.5 million and the especially large threshold above RUB 13.5 million.

Thresholds Source

Investigative jurisdiction

Would amend Criminal Procedure Code Article 151 so Investigative Committee and Federal Security Service investigators handle covered cases under specified rules.

Investigation Source

Timeline

  1. Government approves digital-currency bill package

    The explanatory note states that the government reviewed and approved the related legislative package at its March 30 meeting.

    Draft Source
  2. Bill registered in the State Duma

    The Government of the Russian Federation submitted Bill No. 1209607-8 and its supporting materials.

    Introduced Source
  3. Bill referred to responsible committee

    The bill was referred to the State Duma Committee on State Building and Legislation.

    In committee Source
  4. Committee recommends first-reading adoption

    The responsible committee recommended adoption at first reading and submitted the measure to the State Duma Council.

    In committee Source

Official sources

Editorial note

The English short title is an editorial translation. The official Russian title is preserved above. This profile describes Bill No. 1209607-8 as introduced and verified on June 23, 2026; the proposal is not law and this content is not legal advice.