The Senate Banking Committee advanced the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act by a 15-9 vote, and the National Cryptocurrency Association (NCA) says the vote’s most enduring effect may be the signal that Washington is building a defined regulatory framework for digital assets.
The bill still needs a Senate floor vote, and Democrats have raised objections around anti-money-laundering provisions and political conflicts of interest, while banks and crypto firms have yet to agree on how to treat stablecoin rewards.
Those disputes are live, but NCA says the committee advance already sends a message that ordinary consumers need to hear.
Ali Tager, VP of External Affairs at the NCA, told CryptoSlate:
“Meaningful progress towards clearer, smarter safeguards signals to consumers and businesses alike that crypto — one of the fastest-growing financial technologies — will operate under predictable oversight, just as traditional banks or credit unions do. That means more confidence in when, where, and how they can safely and responsibly engage with digital assets.”

NCA’s 2026 State of Crypto Holders Report, based on a Harris Poll survey of 10,000 US crypto holders conducted from Feb. 12 to Mar. 3, maps the consumer audience behind the committee vote.
Over 67 million American adults now own cryptocurrency, up from one in five just a year ago, with 12 million new holders entering the market in that span.
The survey found that 87% actively used crypto in 2026, up from 80%, and 41% send crypto to friends and family, up from 31%. Using crypto for shopping and paying for goods and services was flagged by 40% of people.
Financial independence through crypto was cited by 54%, and 37% plan to send crypto to employees in the next year, a figure that places the technology in payroll conversations.
NCA found that 69% of holders trust crypto compared with 65% who trust traditional banking, and nearly one in three said their perception of crypto improved most by watching it integrate with systems they already trusted, such as PayPal, Visa, and banks.
Tager said:
“When the legal uncertainty surrounding crypto is replaced with clear consumer protections, the tool feels less novel and more normal.”
Regulation as one lever
Regulatory clarity is a genuine adoption driver, but NCA’s data places it in the middle of the field.
Among trust-building signals, 39% of holders cite government oversight and regulatory clarity, behind transparency from crypto companies at 49% and real-world use cases from regular people at 42%.

Among factors that would make holders more likely to use crypto, earning rewards and interest ranks first at 40%, with greater payment acceptance at 35%, personal knowledge at 35%, reduced volatility at 34%, and smarter regulation at 32%.
That ordering means a federal framework addresses a meaningful slice of the adoption gap, with payment tools, rewards programs, and personal familiarity each working independently alongside it.
More than 33% of crypto holders are women, up 10% points in a single year. The 55-and-older cohort now outnumbers the 18-to-24 cohort among recent buyers, and more holders work in construction than in finance.
The South accounts for 38% of all holders, the West 27%, and the Northeast and Midwest 18% each, a distribution that mirrors the general US population. The people a federal consumer-protection framework would reach are already in the market.
Tager assessed:
“The CLARITY Act should be a big catalyst to help secure American leadership and prevent innovation and capital from moving offshore.”
The EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets framework entered into force in June 2023 and is now fully implemented, while the UK’s cryptoasset regulatory regime is expected to take effect in October 2027.
Jurisdictions with established frameworks become the default destinations for product development and compliance infrastructure when US rules lag.
Two scenarios to expect
If the CLARITY Act passes the Senate floor with its core market-structure framework intact, the consumer trust thesis has a direct mechanism in place.
The 39% of holders who cite government oversight and regulatory clarity as a trust builder gain the certainty they described, exchanges and custodians get clearer compliance paths, and the 76% of holders who want their bank to let them buy and manage crypto alongside regular accounts may find that option routine.
The 90% of holders who plan to buy more crypto in the next year would do so inside a more defined legal environment, and NCA’s argument that clearer rules drive the “novel to normal” transition would have a legislative anchor.
| Scenario | Legislative outcome | Consumer signal | Institutional signal | Adoption implication | Market framing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CLARITY passes with core framework intact | Senate floor approval keeps the bill’s market-structure framework largely intact, followed by House reconciliation, agency rulemaking, and implementation. | The 39% of holders who cite government oversight and regulatory clarity as a trust builder get a clear legal anchor. The 76% who want bank access to buy, hold, and manage crypto may see that option become more routine. | Exchanges, custodians, banks, and crypto firms gain clearer compliance paths for operating in the US. | Crypto’s “novel to normal” transition accelerates as rules, consumer protections, and bank integration make digital assets feel more ordinary. | Boring becomes bullish: regulation supports mainstream confidence rather than speculative hype. |
| CLARITY stalls or fractures | Senate coalition breaks over AML rules, political conflict concerns, stablecoin-reward disputes, or broader negotiations. | The 32% of holders who say smarter regulation would make them more likely to use crypto get no new legal certainty to act on. | Firms remain in wait-and-see mode, with compliance strategy shaped by uncertainty and fragmented agency guidance. | Adoption continues, but through separate channels: payments, rewards, merchant acceptance, bank access, personal familiarity, and private-sector integration. | Signal without statute: the markup shows political feasibility, but not enough certainty to unlock the next phase. |
If Democratic objections to anti-money-laundering rules, political conflict questions, and unresolved stablecoin-reward disputes fracture the Senate floor coalition, the markup becomes a signal without a statute.
The 32% of holders who said smarter regulation would make them more likely to use crypto would have no new legal certainty to act on. Institutional players would maintain the wait-and-see posture that has characterized US crypto compliance through the current cycle.
In that outcome, adoption continues along payment integration, rewards programs, bank access, and personal familiarity, each advancing on its own timetable.
The CLARITY Act’s committee advance tells the market that a durable US framework for digital assets is politically feasible.
The path consisting of a Senate floor vote, reconciliation with the House, agency rulemaking, and implementation is long enough that crypto’s near-term usage curve will still depend on the factors already visible in NCA’s data.
What Congress still has to decide is what kind of boring it wants.
