Policy Reference

Iowa

Crypto law profiles, official sources, milestones, and related coverage for Iowa.

United States
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Law database

3 law profiles

Law / Bill
Draft Intro Committee Passed Enacted Effective
Iowa HF 246: Investment of Public Moneys in Digital Assets HF 246 In committee Details Draft Draft: Completed Intro Introduced: Completed Committee In committee: Current Passed Passed: Pending Enacted Enacted: Pending Effective Effective: Pending

Sponsored by Rep. Taylor R. Collins (R)

A bill for an act relating to the investment of public moneys in digital assets and precious metals.

Pending Iowa bill that would let the state treasurer invest up to 5% of the general fund, cash reserve fund, and economic emergency fund in precious metals, qualifying digital assets, and stablecoins.

Last action: Feb 26, 2025 - Subcommittee recommends passage.

Iowa SF 403: Investment of Public Moneys in Digital Assets SF 403 In committee Details Draft Draft: Completed Intro Introduced: Completed Committee In committee: Current Passed Passed: Pending Enacted Enacted: Pending Effective Effective: Pending

Sponsored by Dave Sires (R)

A bill for an act relating to the investment of public moneys in digital assets and precious metals.

Iowa SF 403 would authorize the state treasurer to invest limited public moneys in certain digital assets, stablecoins, and precious metals, with custody and fund-cap requirements.

Last action: Feb 24, 2025 - Subcommittee appointed: Rozenboom, Bisignano, and Schultz. S.J. 342.

Iowa Digital Financial Asset Transaction Kiosk Fee Law SF 449; amended by SF 2296 Effective Details Draft Draft: Completed Intro Introduced: Completed Committee In committee: Completed Passed Passed: Completed Enacted Enacted: Completed Effective Effective: Current

Sponsored by Iowa Senate Committee on Technology (Unknown)

Iowa Code § 533C.1004 — Digital financial asset transaction kiosks

Iowa Code § 533C.1004 caps digital financial asset kiosk charges at the greater of $5 or 15%, limits transaction amounts, requires disclosures, receipts, fraud controls and refunds, and gives enforcement authority to the attorney general.

Last action: May 6, 2026 - SF 2296 amendments approved by the Governor; amendments took effect on enactment and apply to civil actions commenced on or after that date.

Information is for general purposes only and not legal advice. See full disclaimer.