Wednesday, March 18, 2026

SEC chair Atkins unveils three-path safe-harbor framework to ease crypto fundraising and clarify token status

Crypto illustration of a secure harbor gateway with three neon lanes labeled Startup, Fundraising, Investment, blue glow.

SEC Chair Paul S. Atkins used the DC Blockchain Summit to present a new “Regulation Crypto Assets” framework built around three separate safe-harbor pathways for digital-asset projects. The proposal is meant to reduce one of the market’s biggest persistent frictions: uncertainty over when a token offering falls inside or outside securities law.

Rather than applying a single standard to every project, the framework breaks the issue into different stages of development and fundraising. The structure reflects a more segmented approach in which startups, mature issuers, and transitioning token networks would each face different compliance thresholds and obligations.

Three Safe Harbors for Different Stages of Development

The first path is a startup exemption designed as an innovation window. Under that approach, a project could raise up to $5 million over as many as four years, provided it makes principles-based public disclosures and files the required notice materials with the Commission.

The second path is aimed at more established issuers that want broader access to capital. This fundraising exemption would allow up to $75 million to be raised within any 12-month period, but only if the issuer provides a detailed disclosure document and audited financial statements to the SEC.

The third path is the most structurally important because it addresses how a token might leave securities treatment altogether. The investment-contract safe harbor would allow a token to exit securities classification once the issuer has clearly completed, or permanently stopped, the essential managerial efforts originally promised to investors.

Alongside those exemptions, the framework also introduces a more explicit asset taxonomy. The SEC says digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital tools, and payment stablecoins would not be treated as securities under this proposal, while tokenized digital securities would remain inside securities law.

A Framework Built Around Disclosure and Clearer Boundaries

The proposal places heavy weight on how a project describes itself and what role management continues to play after launch. The SEC is signaling that transparent and specific disclosures about promises, governance, and ongoing managerial involvement will be central to deciding whether an offering still looks like an investment contract.

Atkins framed the effort as an attempt to replace ambiguity with more practical legal boundaries. His message was that the Commission should move toward clear, rule-based lines instead of leaving crypto issuers and market operators to navigate vague enforcement risk.

For traders, issuers, and treasury teams, the framework could offer a more workable map for listings, fundraising, and custody planning. At the same time, the proposal does not remove compliance costs, because the safe harbors still rely on disclosures, filings, and in some cases audited financial reporting that smaller projects may find expensive.

The SEC said draft rules to implement the framework will be published for public comment in the coming weeks. That means the proposal should be read as an interim regulatory architecture rather than a final settlement of crypto market structure, especially since the Commission itself acknowledged that only Congress can deliver a fully comprehensive solution.

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