Armenia The
Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) has adopted the
Law on Crypto Assets in 2025 to strengthen consumer protection in cryptocurrency transactions. In addition, the CBA is trying to introduce regulations on issuance of stablecoins in 2026 with assistance from the IMF.
Australia Stablecoins in Australia are regulated by the
Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC). In December 2024, the ASIC published the "
Information Sheet 225 Crypto-assets" (INFO 225), establishing the regulatory requirement of stablecoins under "
Corporations Act 2001". Under the definition, issuers of stablecoin are treated as operating non-cash payment facilities; algorithmic stablecoins are treated as derivatives; while yield-bearing stablecoins are treated as managed investment schemes.
Bahrain In July 2025, the
Central Bank of Bahrain introduced the
Stablecoin Issuance and Offering (SIO) Module. Under the regulation, stablecoin issuers can issue single currency fiat-backed stablecoins pegged to the
Bahraini Dinar, US dollar, or any other fiat currency upon obtaining approval of the central bank. Algorithmic stablecoins are prohibited.
Canada In November 2025, the Canadian government under
Mark Carney announced in the
Federal Budget 2025 of a proposed legislation to regulate the issuance of stablecoins. The legislation is expected to require issuers to maintain asset reserves, govern redemption policies, implement risk management frameworks, and protect
personal information of Canadians. The
Retail Payment Activities Act will also be amended to enable regulation of
payment service providers using stablecoins. The proposed legislation was made in direct response to the United States' legislation of the
GENIUS Act.
China Stablecoins are considered illegal in
Mainland China. The
People's Bank of China, the central bank of China, also asked Chinese companies, including
Ant Group and
JD.com, to stop their plans to issue stablecoins in the
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region in October 2025. The central bank further clarified in November 2025 that stablecoins are considered non-compliant with current regulation and asked regulatory bodies and law enforcement to crackdown on the use of stablecoins. In February 2026, the
China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) issued a notice banning the issuance of Renminbi-denominated stablecoins within and outside China, the reason being that currency issuance is a matter of
sovereignty.
European Union The
European Union introduced the
Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCAR) in June 2023. The regulation became applicable to asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens on 30 June 2024. MiCAR has no clear regulation on global firms issuing the same stablecoin both from an EU-regulated entity and from a third-country entity, causing concern that in that event of large scale redemption of a multi-country stablecoin, the reserves located in the EU might be quickly depleted. In September 2025, a consortium of nine European banks announced the planned launch of a MiCAR compliant stablecoin in response to the dominance of US denominated stablecoins on the market.
Hong Kong In December 2024,
Hong Kong gazetted its
Stablecoins Bill. The bill was passed in May 2025. The
Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), the regulatory body of stablecoins in Hong Kong, warned the public to "rein in the euphoria". In April 2026, the HKMA issued stablecoin licenses to
HSBC and
Standard Chartered.
Japan In June 2022, Japan's
Financial Services Agency launched the
Regulatory Framework for Crypto-assets and Stablecoins. The regulation requires stablecoin issuer of fiat-backed stablecoin (known as digital-money type stablecoins in Japan) to register with the agency. The agency views algorithmic stablecoin as crypto assets and does not require issuer to register. However, intermediaries such as crypto exchanges are subject to regulations. In August 2025, fintech company JPYC received approval by the agency to launch the first stablecoin pegged to the
Japanese Yen. The first yen-pegged stablecoin launched in October 2025.
Kyrgyzstan In November 2025, Kyrgyzstan launched the first national stablecoin, USDKG. The issuer is state-owned company Virtual Asset Issuer OJSC. The stablecoin is backed by gold and pegged to the US dollar.
Russia In September 2025, the
Central Bank of Russia approved the stablecoin A7A5 as a digital financial asset which can be used by Russian importers and exporters for cross-border settlements.
Singapore In November 2023, the
Monetary Authority of Singapore finalized its
Stablecoin Regulatory Framework after conducting public consultation since October 2022. Issuers of stablecoins are required to maintain a portfolio of reserve assets denominated in the currency of the stablecoin peg. On 16 November 2023, the regulator approved
Paxos Digital and StraitsX as stablecoin issuers.
South Korea Regulations on the issuance of stablecoins in South Korea are being discussed. In February 2026,
Bank of Korea, the central bank of South Korea, suggested that only licensed
commercial banks should be able to issue
won-denominated stablecoins to alleviate concerns regarding money laundering and financial stability. However, the
Financial Services Commission (FSC) suggested a more open approach on the participation of technology firms, arguing that a rigid approach would hinder innovation.
UAE In June 2024, the
Central Bank of the UAE established the
Payment Token Services Regulations to regulate the use of stablecoins in the UAE. The regulations prohibit persons within the UAE from accepting stablecoins for the sale of goods and services except licensed payment token.In April 2025, the
sovereign wealth fund of
Abu Dhabi, ADQ, and the
First Abu Dhabi Bank, are set to launch a stablecoin backed by
dirhams.
United Kingdom In October 2025,
Andrew Bailey, governor of the
Bank of England, announced that the Bank of England will publish a consultation paper on the UK's stablecoin regulation. The regulation is set to apply to stablecoins used for day-to-day payments and those used for settling tokenized financial transaction. Bailey is known to be a skeptic of stablecoin and once said stablecoins risked pulling money out of the banking system. The comments by Bailey drawn criticism from stablecoin issuer for constraining investment in the UK. Under the proposed regulation, individuals would be subject to a limit of holding £20,000 worth of stablecoins. In February 2026, the
Financial Conduct Authority, Britain's financial regulator, announced the use of a "sandbox" programme to trial stablecoin products in controlled conditions.
United States of America In July 2025, the United States passed the
GENIUS Act, a bill which allows banks and other financial institutions to issue stablecoins backed by fiat currency or other high-quality collateral, such as
US Treasuries. At the time of its passing, the bill was expected to generate greater demand for US Treasuries by stablecoin issuers.
Stablecoins and US Treasuries In November 2025,
Stephen Miran at the
Federal Reserve Board of Governors, confirmed that stablecoins are already increasing demand for US Treasuries, and are "contributing to the dollar's dominance". This would cause a decrease in the
neutral rate of interest and lower borrowing cost for the US government. An estimate by the Bank for International Settlements using data from 2021 to 2025 found that demand for stablecoins lowers 3-month T-bill yields by about 2-2.5 basis points, an effect comparable to that of small-scale
quantitative easing.
State of Wyoming In March 2023, the Legislature of the
State of Wyoming passed the
Wyoming Stable Token Act, which established the Wyoming Stable Token Commission for the purpose of issuing stablecoin. In January 2026, the first state-backed stablecoin has been released in Wyoming. == Defunct stablecoin projects ==