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Stablecoin Transparency and Accountability for a Better Ledger Economy Act of 2025
House bill H.R. 2392 would create a U.S. framework for payment stablecoin issuers, reserves, disclosures, AML/sanctions duties, and oversight. It was reported in House on May 6, 2025, but was not enacted as H.R. 2392.
At a glance
Bill details
- Bill number
- H.R. 2392
- Session
- 119th Congress (2025-2026)
- Chamber
- House
- Legislative stage
- Chamber 1
Action
- Last action
- Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 68, after being reported amended by House Financial Services.
- Last action date
- May 6, 2025
Sponsor
- Primary sponsor
- Rep. Bryan Steil
- Sponsor party
- Republican
- Co-sponsors
- J. French Hill; Ritchie Torres; Tom Emmer; Bill Huizenga; Daniel Meuser; Young Kim; Tim Moore; Troy Downing; Mike Haridopolos; Josh Gottheimer; Sam T. Liccardo; William R. Timmons IV; Michael Lawler; Zachary Nunn; John W. Rose; Marlin Stutzman; Shri Thanedar
Source
- Source provider
- Congress.gov
- Source ID
- 119-HR2392
- State legislature
- Official bill page
Overview
The Stablecoin Transparency and Accountability for a Better Ledger Economy Act of 2025, or STABLE Act of 2025, is a United States House bill, H.R. 2392, that would create a federal framework for payment stablecoin issuance, reserves, disclosures, and supervision. As of June 4, 2026, Congress.gov lists H.R. 2392 as introduced, with the latest action on May 6, 2025, when it was placed on the Union Calendar after being reported amended by the House Financial Services Committee. The bill has not been enacted as H.R. 2392, so this profile does not assign an enacted date or effective date.
This profile covers H.R. 2392 as a House bill. A separate Senate-originated stablecoin measure, the GENIUS Act, S. 1582, became Public Law No. 119-27 on July 18, 2025. Editors should treat the GENIUS Act as a related enacted framework, not as the legal status of H.R. 2392.
STABLE Act of 2025 scope and covered actors
H.R. 2392 would regulate “payment stablecoins,” generally defined in the reported text as digital assets designed for payment or settlement, denominated in a national currency, and tied to redemption or stable-value representations. The bill would limit U.S. issuance to “permitted payment stablecoin issuers,” including subsidiaries of insured depository institutions, federal-qualified nonbank payment stablecoin issuers, and state-qualified payment stablecoin issuers.
The proposal also addresses custodial intermediaries. After an 18-month post-enactment period, custodial intermediaries would generally be restricted from offering or selling payment stablecoins in the United States unless the stablecoin was issued by a permitted issuer, subject to exceptions for certain foreign issuers operating under comparable regulatory regimes. The text includes a wallet-related rule of construction for lawful self-custody transactions through software or hardware wallets.
Key provisions for reserves, disclosure, and oversight
- Reserve backing: permitted issuers would maintain reserves backing outstanding payment stablecoins on at least a one-to-one basis using eligible assets such as U.S. currency, demand deposits, short-term Treasury securities, overnight repurchase arrangements backed by short-term Treasuries, and certain money market fund shares.
- Redemption and reporting: issuers would publicly disclose redemption policies, establish procedures for timely redemption, and publish monthly reserve-composition reports on their websites.
- Certification and examination: an independent registered public accounting firm would examine monthly reserve-report information, and the issuer’s chief executive and chief financial officers would certify the prior month-end report. The bill specifies criminal penalties for knowing or willful false certifications.
- Federal-state structure: state-qualified issuers would operate under state regimes certified to meet or exceed federal standards, while federal-qualified nonbank issuers would be regulated and supervised by the Comptroller of the Currency.
- AML and sanctions: permitted issuers would be treated as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act and would have tailored anti-money laundering, counter-terrorist-financing, recordkeeping, suspicious activity monitoring, customer identification, and sanctions-compliance obligations.
Stablecoin policy provisions beyond issuer licensing
The reported bill would prohibit permitted payment stablecoin issuers from paying interest or yield to stablecoin holders. It would also require disclosures stating that payment stablecoins are not backed by the full faith and credit of the United States, guaranteed by the U.S. government, or covered by federal deposit or share insurance.
For securities-law treatment, H.R. 2392 would amend several federal securities statutes to state that a payment stablecoin issued by a permitted payment stablecoin issuer is not a security under those laws. The proposal would also create a two-year moratorium on new endogenously collateralized stablecoins, defined as assets that rely solely on another digital asset created or maintained by the same originator to maintain a fixed price.
Status and timeline for H.R. 2392
Rep. Bryan Steil introduced H.R. 2392 on March 26, 2025, and the bill was referred to the House Committee on Financial Services. On April 2, 2025, the committee held a markup and ordered the bill reported amended by a 32-17 vote. On May 6, 2025, the bill was reported amended, assigned H. Rept. 119-94, committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union, and placed on the Union Calendar as Calendar No. 68. Congress.gov did not list House passage, Senate passage, presentment, or enactment for H.R. 2392 as of the verification date.
Key provisions
Permitted issuer limitation
Would make U.S. issuance unlawful unless the issuer is permitted, with post-enactment limits for custodial intermediary offers and sales.
Reserve and redemption standards
Would require at least 1:1 reserves in eligible liquid assets, public redemption policies, timely redemption procedures, and monthly reserve reports.
Monthly examination and certification
Would require independent monthly examination of reserve reports and CEO/CFO certification, with criminal penalties for false certifications.
Federal and state oversight
Would certify state regimes against federal standards and place federal-qualified nonbank issuers under OCC supervision.
AML and sanctions duties
Would treat permitted issuers as Bank Secrecy Act financial institutions and require AML/CFT, records, suspicious activity, CIP, and sanctions compliance.
Securities law clarification
Would amend federal securities laws to exclude permitted payment stablecoins from several statutory definitions of security.
Algorithmic stablecoin moratorium
Would impose a two-year moratorium on new endogenously collateralized stablecoins after enactment.
Timeline
Introduced in House
Rep. Bryan Steil introduced H.R. 2392; it was referred to House Financial Services.
Committee markup
House Financial Services ordered the bill reported amended by a 32-17 vote.
Reported in House
Reported amended as H. Rept. 119-94 and placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 68.
Who it affects
Actors
Banks, Custodial intermediaries, Nonbank issuers, Payment stablecoin holders, Stablecoin issuers
Asset classes
Payment stablecoins, Stablecoins
Official sources
Editorial note
This profile covers H.R. 2392 as a House bill. The separate Senate-originated GENIUS Act, S. 1582, became Public Law No. 119-27 on July 18, 2025 and should be treated as a related enacted framework.