The UK has now put into statute what courts and regulators have been edging toward for years: digital assets such as crypto-tokens are property in their own right, even though they do not fit into the two traditional categories of personal property.
Under long-standing English law, personal property has been split into only two buckets:
- Things in possession: tangible, physical objects like cash, cars or gold.
- Things in action: rights that are enforced through legal action, such as debts, shares or contractual claims.
Crypto and other purely digital assets sit awkwardly between these. They are not physical objects that can be possessed, and they are more than a mere claim against a counterparty. Courts had already treated them as property in practice, but without a clear doctrinal home.
The Property (Digital Assets etc) Act 2025 changes that by:
- Confirming that certain digital assets – such as crypto-tokens – can attract property rights even if they do not fit into the traditional two categories.
- Giving formal recognition to a “third category” of personal property for these assets, with the details to be developed by the courts over time.
- Applying across England and Wales and Northern Ireland, aligning with earlier Law Commission recommendations.
In effect, the Act removes lingering doubts about whether crypto is “really” property and gives judges a statutory foundation for treating it as such in hard cases.
From Legal Grey Zone To Statutory Clarity
Until now, the treatment of crypto in UK law was built mainly on case law and advisory statements.
- In several landmark decisions, English courts granted proprietary injunctions over Bitcoin and other tokens, effectively treating them as property so they could be frozen and recovered in fraud and hacking cases.
- The UK Jurisdiction Taskforce and later the Law Commission argued that digital assets should be recognised as a third type of personal property, separate from both things in possession and things in action.
- However, there was still no definitive statutory language confirming that third category.
The new Act is designed to close that gap. It does not try to list every type of digital asset or define a perfect category in advance. Instead, it:
- States that a thing is not prevented from being the object of property rights just because it does not fall within the existing two categories.
- Signals that the common law should develop a distinct “third category” for digital assets and similar intangible objects, sometimes called “data objects” in the Law Commission’s work.
This approach deliberately leaves space for judges to refine how different kinds of digital assets are treated as new use cases emerge.
Why This Matters For Crypto Holders
For individual and institutional holders of crypto, the new law does not change how wallets or exchanges work day to day. Its importance shows up when things go wrong.
Insolvency And Exchange Failures
When a crypto exchange or platform collapses, courts and insolvency practitioners must decide:
- Who actually owns the tokens on the platform.
- Whether customers have a proprietary claim to specific coins or only an unsecured claim for the value.
- How those claims rank against other creditors.
By confirming that crypto-tokens can sit in their own recognised property category, the Act:
- Makes it easier for courts to treat customer assets as property held on their behalf, rather than simply as part of the firm’s general estate.
- Lays groundwork for clearer priority rules when digital assets are held through custodial or omnibus arrangements.
That does not guarantee a particular outcome in every insolvency, but it gives judges a clearer starting point than before.
Collateral, Lending And Structured Products
For lenders and trading firms, the key question is often whether they can take and enforce security over digital assets in a predictable way.
With a statutory third category in place:
- Lawyers have firmer ground to structure fixed and floating charges, title-transfer arrangements and rehypothecation involving crypto.
- Standard documentation for derivatives, repo and collateralised lending can more confidently treat tokens as recognised property rather than legal novelties.
- Courts can develop doctrines around perfection, priority and the rights of innocent purchasers by analogy with existing rules for tangible assets and receivables.
Over time, this should reduce the legal friction and uncertainty premium that has made some institutions hesitant to accept crypto as collateral.
Disputes, Fraud And Recovery
In cases involving hacks, fraud or misappropriation, victims often seek proprietary remedies – for example, claiming that stolen tokens are still theirs and must be returned.
The Act strengthens the legal footing for such claims by:
- Confirming that digital assets can be the subject of property rights, tracing and proprietary injunctions.
- Supporting the use of freezing orders and disclosure orders against intermediaries who receive or process tainted tokens.
Again, courts were already moving in this direction, but statutory backing should make outcomes more consistent and easier to predict.
Part Of A Broader UK Strategy On Crypto
The creation of a third property category for digital assets is not happening in a vacuum. It fits into a wider UK strategy to pull crypto into the mainstream financial and legal framework rather than leaving it in a grey zone.
Over the past few years, the government has:
- Consulted on a financial-services style regime for cryptoasset activities, bringing exchanges, custodians and lending platforms into the regulatory perimeter.
- Rejected proposals from a parliamentary committee to regulate crypto trading as gambling, insisting instead that it should be treated as a financial service with appropriate investor protections.
- Signalled repeatedly that it wants the UK to be a leading jurisdiction for digital-asset innovation, so long as consumer and market risks are properly managed.
The new property law sits alongside these initiatives. It does not decide tax policy or financial regulation, but it provides the property-law backbone those regimes depend on.
What The Law Does Not Do
Despite some headlines, the Property (Digital Assets etc) Act 2025 is not a sweeping crypto code. Several important points remain outside its scope:
- It does not define exactly which digital assets fall into the third category; that is left for courts to work out in specific cases.
- It does not set out detailed rules on custody, consumer protection or market abuse; those are being handled through separate financial-regulation reforms.
- It does not resolve all cross-border questions – for example, which law applies when tokens are held through multiple jurisdictions.
Instead, it clarifies one crucial point: digital assets can be objects of property rights in the UK even though they are neither traditional physical goods nor classic choses in action.
Implications And Next Steps
In practical terms, the new law is likely to have several medium-term effects:
- Contract drafting: Lawyers will adjust standard terms for custody, lending and derivatives to reflect the new property category and to anticipate how courts might treat title and security interests over tokens.
- Litigation strategy: Parties in disputes will have clearer arguments for proprietary remedies, especially in fraud, insolvency and trust cases involving crypto.
- Product design: Financial institutions will find it easier to design structured products, collateral arrangements and tokenised assets that rely on well-understood property concepts.
For the courts, the key task will be to fill in the details: deciding how doctrines like possession, good-faith purchase, priority and tracing apply to this new category, and where analogies with existing law do and do not make sense.
Conclusion
By enacting the Property (Digital Assets etc) Act 2025, the UK has taken a decisive step in bringing crypto and other digital assets inside the mainstream of property law.
Digital assets are now explicitly recognised as capable of forming a distinct third category of personal property, separate from both physical things and traditional legal claims. That recognition does not answer every question, but it gives courts, businesses and investors a much clearer framework for dealing with crypto in insolvency, collateral, enforcement and everyday commercial arrangements.
In policy terms, the message is clear: the UK does not see crypto as a casino sitting outside the legal system. It sees it as a new class of asset that should be governed by modernised versions of the same property rules that underpin the rest of the financial system.
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