U.S. Regulators Tag BTC, ETH, XRP Digital Commodities
In a landmark development, U.S. regulators have issued joint guidance classifying many leading crypto tokens as “digital commodities” rather than securities.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) now explicitly treat 16 major assets, including BTC, ETH, SOL, ADA, XRP, and others, as digital commodities under the CFTC’s primary oversight.
The new token taxonomy says that most protocol tokens, NFTs, and many stablecoins are not securities, reducing enforcement uncertainty around trading, staking, and airdrops.
The move is still guidance, not statute, so upcoming bills like the Clarity Act and implementation details will determine how durable and broad this shift really is.
On 17–18 March 2026, the SEC and CFTC released a joint interpretive framework that formally classifies a group of 16 large-cap crypto assets as “digital commodities” instead of securities, including Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL), Cardano (ADA), XRP, Dogecoin (DOGE), Litecoin (LTC), Chainlink (LINK), Shiba Inu (SHIB), Polkadot (DOT), Aptos (APT) and others.
The move is a major policy U-turn after years of enforcement-first scrutiny of these same names.
The guidance introduces a taxonomy that splits digital assets into categories such as digital commodities, digital tools, digital collectables, stablecoins and digital securities, with only the last bucket treated as securities.
Tokenised stocks, bonds and funds still fall squarely under securities rules; the change is about protocol- and payment-style tokens rather than on-chain versions of traditional assets.
For the named large caps, the default assumption in the United States is now “commodity-style token” rather than “unregistered security,” which is a big shift in legal risk framing.
By declaring that most major tokens are commodities or tools, regulators are effectively shifting day-to-day oversight of these assets to the CFTC rather than to SEC securities registration rules.
That lowers the threat that normal spot trading of those assets is itself an unregistered securities transaction.
The guidance also clarifies that activities such as protocol mining, staking rewards, and certain airdrops are not automatically securities transactions, and that a token associated with an investment contract can later “graduate” into a non-security commodity once the issuer’s core promises are fulfilled.
For exchanges, brokers and custodians, that makes listing and supporting these large assets more straightforward, though they still must monitor how tokens are marketed and used.
The framework is an interpretive memo, not a new law, so it can be challenged in court or revised by future leadership at the SEC and CFTC. Pending “market structure” bills, such as the Clarity Act, could codify or modify this split between securities and commodities.
Only a defined set of 16 majors is explicitly named; thousands of mid- and small-cap companies are still evaluated based on their structure, marketing, and decentralisation.
Projects that look like fundraising schemes with strong profit promises can still be treated as securities even if similar tokens are not. Brokers and platforms now carry more responsibility to justify their classifications in real time.³
In summary. Regulators have finally drawn a clearer line between protocol tokens and tokenised securities, giving blue-chip crypto assets commodity status and shifting much oversight toward the CFTC.
That reduces legal overhang for the largest coins, but the guidance is not yet hard law and leaves smaller tokens and edge cases to facts and circumstances tests.
The key next phase is whether Congress and future rulemaking lock this taxonomy in or reopen the classification debate. XRP Rises as Ripple Eyes Australian Financial Services License

