Crypto Law Profile

Russia Federal Law No. 45-FZ: Digital Rights for Cross-Border Settlements

Russian law permitting digital financial assets and utility digital rights as consideration under qualifying foreign-trade contracts between residents and nonresidents, while placing related transfers under currency-control and AML oversight.

Russia Effective Act Mar 11, 2024

At a glance

Jurisdiction Russia; federal amending legislation.
Current status In force as of June 22, 2026; a broader reform bill remains pending.
Covered instruments Digital financial assets, utility digital rights, and qualifying hybrid rights.
Contract scope Foreign-trade contracts between residents and nonresidents for specified goods, services, information, or IP.

Overview

Federal Law No. 45-FZ of March 11, 2024 is a Russian federal amending law officially titled “On Amendments to Certain Legislative Acts of the Russian Federation.” Its principal digital-rights provisions entered into force on March 11, 2024 and remain operative as of June 22, 2026. The profile title “Digital Rights for Cross-Border Settlements” is editorial: the statute also changes rules concerning anti-money-laundering controls, currency regulation, financial platforms, securities testing, and related infrastructure.

The law creates a statutory route for using two Russian-law instruments—digital financial assets and utility digital rights—as consideration under qualifying foreign-trade contracts. It does not establish a general permission to pay with every form of token or decentralized cryptocurrency. Its operative language is tied to digital rights recognized under Russian legislation and recorded through the information systems or investment platforms specified by that legislation.

Cross-border settlement scope

The core amendments permit digital financial assets and utility digital rights to serve as consideration under contracts between a Russian currency-law resident and a nonresident. The contract must concern the transfer of goods, performance of work, provision of services, supply of information, or transfer of intellectual-property results, including exclusive rights. The same formulation was added to the digital-financial-assets law and the investment-platform law.

This structure matters because “digital financial asset” is a defined Russian legal category rather than a generic synonym for cryptoasset. Utility digital rights are likewise platform-based claims, such as rights to demand delivery of goods, intellectual-property rights or use rights, work, or services. The authorization therefore attaches to the statutory instrument and the qualifying foreign-trade contract, not merely to the use of distributed-ledger technology.

Currency-control treatment

Federal Law No. 45-FZ brings digital rights expressly into Russia’s currency-regulation framework. Certain digital rights linked to foreign-currency monetary claims or foreign securities are treated as currency valuables; other specified digital rights are not. Currency operations involving digital rights must occur in the relevant digital-financial-asset information systems or investment platforms.

The Bank of Russia may, with the designated federal authority, prohibit particular categories of currency operations involving the acquisition or disposal of digital rights or impose conditions on them. The currency-law amendment also states that resident–nonresident use of digital rights as payment is available only under the qualifying foreign-trade contracts described by the statute. These provisions make the settlement permission conditional and supervised rather than unrestricted.

AML and beneficial-ownership controls

The law adds transfers of utility digital rights, digital financial assets, and hybrid rights used as foreign-trade consideration to the list of transactions subject to mandatory control under Federal Law No. 115-FZ. The Bank of Russia’s March 2024 AML review describes this control as a direct consequence of permitting those instruments in cross-border contracts.

Federal Law No. 45-FZ also authorizes the Bank of Russia to request information about the beneficial owner of a digital-financial-asset issuer from the issuer or the operator of the issuing information system. Both must provide the requested information. These provisions connect the settlement channel to financial-monitoring and ownership-transparency mechanisms.

Status, phase-in dates, and pending reform

The State Duma adopted the law on February 27, 2024, the Federation Council approved it on March 6, and the president signed it on March 11. Most provisions took effect upon official publication that day. Selected, largely financial-platform provisions took effect on April 11, 2024, while a deferred customer-identification provision took effect on January 1, 2025.

As of June 22, 2026, the cross-border digital-rights rules remain in the consolidated statutes. A government package—Bills No. 1194918-8 and 1194929-8—would reorganize Russia’s digital-currency and digital-rights framework and remains under State Duma consideration after first reading. Because that proposal is not enacted, it does not change this profile’s current “In force” status, but it warrants near-term monitoring. This profile describes the legislation and does not provide legal or compliance advice.

Key provisions

Foreign-trade consideration

Permits digital financial assets and utility digital rights to serve as consideration under qualifying foreign-trade contracts between residents and nonresidents.

Payments Mar 11, 2024 Source

Defined contract categories

Covers contracts for goods, work, services, information, and intellectual-property results, including exclusive rights.

Payments Mar 11, 2024 Source

Currency-law classification

Classifies specified digital rights as currency valuables or non-currency valuables according to their underlying rights and brings them within currency control.

Regulatory perimeter Mar 11, 2024 Source

Regulated platform execution

Requires digital-right currency operations to occur in regulated DFA information systems or investment platforms specified by Russian law.

Tokenization Mar 11, 2024 Source

Bank of Russia restrictions

Allows the Bank of Russia, with the designated federal authority, to prohibit or condition specified acquisition and disposal operations involving digital rights.

Regulatory perimeter Mar 11, 2024 Source

Mandatory AML control

Makes transfers of covered digital rights used as foreign-trade consideration subject to mandatory control under Federal Law No. 115-FZ.

AML/CFT Mar 11, 2024 Source

Beneficial-owner information

Allows the Bank of Russia to request beneficial-owner information for a DFA issuer from the issuer or relevant information-system operator.

AML/CFT Mar 11, 2024 Source

Timeline

  1. State Duma adoption

    The State Duma adopted the measure that became Federal Law No. 45-FZ.

    Passed Source
  2. Federation Council approval

    The Federation Council approved the law before presidential signature.

    Passed Source
  3. Signed, published, and principally effective

    The president signed the law; it was officially published and most provisions entered into force.

    In force Source
  4. Selected platform provisions effective

    Specified financial-platform testing and related provisions completed their 30-day phase-in.

    Effective Source
  5. Deferred AML provision effective

    A deferred provision on delegated customer identification through financial-platform operators took effect.

    Effective Source

Who it affects

Actors

Bank of Russia

Asset classes

Digital financial assets, Utility digital rights

Official sources

Editorial note

“Digital Rights for Cross-Border Settlements” is an editorial short title. The official English rendering used in this profile is “Federal Law No. 45-FZ of March 11, 2024 ‘On Amendments to Certain Legislative Acts of the Russian Federation.’” The statute’s official title is in Russian and is generic because it amends several laws. This profile focuses on its crypto-relevant provisions. Russian “digital financial assets” and “utility digital rights” are statutory digital-right categories and should not be treated as synonyms for decentralized cryptocurrency.