California's Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI) has released an update on the implementation of the Digital Financial Assets Law (DFAL), requiring all individuals or companies providing crypto-related services to California residents to obtain a DFAL license, submit a license application, or meet exemption conditions by July 1, 2026, or face enforcement actions. According to BlockBeats, the DFAL, signed into law by California Governor Gavin Newsom in October 2023, establishes a statewide licensing and regulatory framework for digital assets, including various digital asset services and crypto ATMs. This system is widely compared to New York's BitLicense introduced in 2015.
The DFAL license applications will open on March 9, 2026, through the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System (NMLS), and regulatory authorities recommend that businesses review the checklist and participate in industry training on March 23.
California accounts for about a quarter of all blockchain enterprises in the United States. Joe Ciccolo, Executive Director of the California Blockchain Advocacy Coalition (CBAC), noted that as the world's fourth-largest economy, California's regulatory approach could drive a unified compliance standard across the U.S. "Clear and predictable rules help attract serious operators and institutional capital," he stated, but also warned that overly aggressive enforcement or regulations disconnected from industry realities might lead some businesses to exit the California market or move overseas.