Russia is close to legalizing cryptocurrencies, but not quite.
The State Duma has passed the “Digital Currency and Digital Rights” bill in its first reading, but only within a strictly regulated system shaped by the state.
Legal, but not free?
The bill recognizes crypto as property, but not as legal tender. This means they can be owned and traded, but not used for everyday payments.
State agency TASS reported that only the rouble (and its digital version) will remain valid for transactions.
Crypto use is limited to specific areas like foreign trade, service payments, and transfers of intellectual property.


At the centre of this system is the Bank of Russia. It will act as the main authority overseeing the market. All crypto-related businesses, including exchanges, brokers, and custodians, must get licences to operate. The central bank will also have the power to decide which transactions are allowed and even restrict certain tokens.
Restricted access and a list of approved tokens
People won’t be able to buy crypto freely; they must go through licensed intermediaries. Investors will be split into “qualified” and “non-qualified” groups. Those in the second category will need to pass a test and will face an annual investment cap of around 300,000 roubles.
In effect, participation is carefully filtered.
The range of assets available will be just as restricted. Only cryptocurrencies that meet strict rules on market size, liquidity, and track record will be allowed. This likely includes major names like Bitcoin [BTC], Ethereum [ETH], Solana [SOL], Binance [BNB], and Tron [TRX].
Pushback as Russia sets timeline for final approval
Source: https://ambcrypto.com/crypto-is-legal-in-russia-now-but-not-free-to-use-why/