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Wyoming Decentralized Unincorporated Nonprofit Association Act
Wyoming’s DUNA Act creates a state entity framework for decentralized unincorporated nonprofit associations, covering governance, member liability, property, records, DLT-based voting, mergers and conversions.
At a glance
Bill details
- Bill number
- SF0050
- Session
- 2024 Budget Session
- Chamber
- Senate
- Legislative stage
- Enacted
Action
- Last action
- Governor signed SEA No. 0023; assigned Chapter Number 50.
- Last action date
- Mar 7, 2024
Sponsor
- Primary sponsor
- Select Committee on Blockchain, Financial Technology and Digital Innovation Technology
- Sponsor party
- Unknown
Source
- Source provider
- State legislature
- Source ID
- 24LSO-0104; SEA No. 0023; Ch. 50
- State legislature
- Official bill page
Overview
The Wyoming Decentralized Unincorporated Nonprofit Association Act is Wyoming’s state-law framework for decentralized unincorporated nonprofit associations, often shortened to DUNAs. The act was enacted through Senate File 50 in the 2024 Budget Session and took effect on July 1, 2024. It creates Chapter 32 of Title 17 of the Wyoming Statutes and is directed at decentralized groups that use governance principles, distributed ledger technology, smart contracts or related mechanisms to coordinate nonprofit activity.
Wyoming DUNA Act overview
The statute defines a decentralized unincorporated nonprofit association as an unincorporated nonprofit association that meets statutory conditions, including a threshold of at least 100 members joined by mutual consent for a common nonprofit purpose. The act is not a securities, tax, money-transmission or consumer-protection safe harbor. Instead, it addresses entity status, internal governance, member and administrator roles, property, litigation capacity, records, indemnification, mergers, conversions and winding up.
For crypto and open-source networks, the most notable feature is the act’s recognition that organizational governance may be expressed through “governing principles.” Those principles can include agreements, consensus formation algorithms, smart contracts and enacted governance proposals. The statute also permits a DUNA to provide for governance, in whole or in part, through distributed ledger technology, including smart contracts.
Key provisions for decentralized organizations
- Separate entity treatment: A DUNA is treated as a legal entity separate from its members for contract and tort rights, duties and liabilities.
- Member liability limits: Members and administrators are not liable for a DUNA’s contract or tort obligation merely because of their status or participation in management.
- Nonprofit purpose: A DUNA may conduct profit-making activity, but profits must be used for, or set aside for, the common nonprofit purpose, and dividends or profit distributions are generally prohibited.
- Property and court capacity: A DUNA may hold and transfer real or personal property and may sue, defend or participate in judicial, administrative, arbitration or mediation proceedings in its own name.
- On-chain governance: Governing principles may specify voting procedures, smart contracts, consensus mechanisms and whether distributed ledger technology is public, private, immutable or changeable.
DAO governance and member administration
The act does not require every DUNA to have an administrator. Where administrators are selected, their rights and duties are established through the authority granted to act. Unless the governing principles provide otherwise, several major actions require approval of a majority of membership interests participating in a vote, including selecting or dismissing administrators, amending governing principles, disposing of property, dissolving the association and determining the association’s policy or purpose.
Members generally do not have fiduciary duties to the DUNA or to other members solely by being members, but the statute subjects members to the implied contractual covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The act also allows membership interests to be transferable unless governing principles provide otherwise.
Records, service of process and dispute posture
A DUNA may appoint an agent for service of process with the Wyoming secretary of state. Members and administrators may request electronic records related to the DUNA’s activities, financial condition and other material circumstances, subject to statutory limits. If the information is already available to the requester on decentralized ledger technology, the DUNA is not obligated to provide duplicative records. The statute also permits reasonable confidentiality and safeguarding restrictions.
Status and 2026 amendment watch
As of June 9, 2026, the DUNA Act is effective in Wyoming. Editors should note that 2026 Senate File 22, enacted as a separate amendment bill, takes effect on July 1, 2026. That measure amends the DUNA framework by conforming terminology, adding automatic conversion language for DUNAs that fall below the 100-member threshold and revising winding-up provisions, among other changes. This profile should be reviewed after July 1, 2026, to align with the operative amended text.
Key provisions
Separate Legal Entity
A DUNA is a legal entity separate from its members for contract and tort rights, duties and liabilities; judgments against the association are not, by themselves, judgments against members.
Nonprofit Purpose and Distributions
Profit-making activity is permitted only when profits further or are set aside for the common nonprofit purpose; dividends and member or administrator profit distributions are generally barred.
Governing Principles
Governing principles may include agreements, consensus algorithms, smart contracts and enacted governance proposals that define rights, duties and operations.
Distributed Ledger Governance
The act permits governance through distributed ledger technology, including smart contracts, voting procedures and consensus mechanisms.
Records and Service of Process
Members or administrators can request electronic records, subject to statutory limits, and a DUNA may appoint an agent for service of process.
2026 Amendment Review
SF0022 adds conforming amendments, automatic conversion language if membership falls below 100 and revised winding-up provisions effective July 1, 2026.
Timeline
SF0050 enacted
Governor signed SEA No. 0023, enacting the DUNA framework as Chapter 50.
DUNA Act became effective
The enrolled act states that the Wyoming DUNA Act is effective July 1, 2024.
SF0022 amendment enacted
Governor signed SEA No. 0021, an amendment bill for unincorporated nonprofit associations.
Who it affects
Actors
Governor of Wyoming, Wyoming Legislature, Wyoming Secretary of State
Asset classes
Digital assets
Official sources
Editorial note
As of June 9, 2026, the 2024 DUNA Act is effective. SF0022, enacted in 2026, amends Chapter 32 effective July 1, 2026; review this profile after that date.


