The GENIUS Act gave US regulators a single, clearly marked deadline: finalize stablecoin rules within one year of enactment. That year expired on July 18, 2026. The rules did not arrive.
Not one of the federal agencies tasked with implementing the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins Act, the first comprehensive federal legislation for payment stablecoins, managed to issue final regulations by the statutory deadline. The Federal Reserve, OCC, FDIC, NCUA, and Treasury all had a seat at the table. None delivered a finished product.
A year of advance notices and not much else
The GENIUS Act was signed into law by President Trump on July 18, 2025, after months of congressional wrangling over how to bring payment stablecoins under a federal regulatory umbrella. The legislation laid out core requirements: full 1:1 reserve backing in US dollars or equivalent safe assets, licensing frameworks for issuers, anti-money laundering compliance programs, and public disclosure mandates.
Treasury moved first, publishing an advance notice of proposed rulemaking in September 2025, with a public comment period that closed in November 2025. Other agencies followed with their own preliminary proposals and information requests through late 2025 and into 2026. But advance notices are the regulatory equivalent of saying “we’re thinking about it.” They are not rules. They carry no binding force.
Why it matters that nobody got penalized
Here’s the thing about the GENIUS Act’s rulemaking deadline: there’s no enforcement mechanism. No penalty clause triggers when regulators fail to meet the timeline. No automatic fallback provisions kick in to fill the vacuum.
The law’s requirements are set to take effect either on January 18, 2027, or 120 days after final regulations are introduced, whichever comes later. But without finalized rules, issuers have no clear picture of what compliance actually looks like in practice.
Industry executives have pointed to what they describe as informal decision-making processes around charters and market access, a situation where regulatory signals come through backchannel conversations rather than published guidance.
What this means for the stablecoin market
The GENIUS Act was supposed to end regulatory purgatory for the stablecoin sector. Instead, the missed deadline extends the uncertainty into at least the second half of 2026, and potentially well into 2027.
The January 2027 effective date still looms, but its relevance depends entirely on whether regulators can get final rules out the door in time for the 120-day implementation window to matter. If rulemaking stretches into late 2026 or early 2027, the practical effect is that the stablecoin industry operates without a federal framework for the better part of two years after Congress acted.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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