The SEC Division of Trading and Markets published a staff statement, telling certain wallet-linked crypto trading apps they can operate without a broker-dealer license – for now – as long as they function as neutral software and stay out of the business of actually moving your money.
The detail most headlines are missing, though, is that this exemption carries no legal force, expires in five years, and could evaporate entirely if Congress fails to act or a future SEC leadership decides to reverse course.

The market these rules address is already substantial. RWA.xyz currently shows $29.3 billion in distributed real-world assets, $13.4 billion in tokenized US Treasuries, and over $1 billion in tokenized public equities and ETFs. The SEC is drawing lines around a market with real users and real money in it.
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What Is a Self-Custody Crypto App and Why Does This Rule Matter?
Self-custody means you hold your own crypto, no company has access to your funds, no bank is holding your assets on your behalf. Think of it like keeping cash in a safe bolted to your floor versus depositing it at a bank. With self-custody, you control the keys. Lose them, and there’s no customer service line to call.
A self-custody app or wallet-linked interface lets you interact with crypto markets while maintaining direct control. It might show you prices, let you compare transaction routes, or help you sign a trade – all without ever touching your funds. That’s the key distinction the SEC is now trying to formalize.
The SEC just issued staff guidance clarifying that certain self-custodial interfaces used for trading digital asset securities don't require broker-dealer registration, provided they stay within narrow guardrails.
The conditions: users must control their own keys, the interface… pic.twitter.com/Nk68ZzNy39
— TFTC (@TFTC21) April 13, 2026
Here’s where broker licensing enters the picture. Under traditional securities law, anyone who facilitates securities transactions – executing trades, holding client assets, routing orders – generally needs to register as a broker-dealer. That’s a costly, compliance-heavy process built for Wall Street firms.
Applying that standard to a simple crypto interface that just helps you click buttons would effectively shut down most of the self-custody app ecosystem overnight. Understanding why self-custody matters is increasingly important as regulators draw clearer lines around who can offer what services.
What Does the SEC 5-Year Crypto Exemption Actually Allow?
The SEC’s statement defines a narrow category called a “Covered User Interface Provider.” To qualify, an app must meet a strict set of conditions – and the list of things that disqualify you is longer than the list of things that don’t.
What this really describes is a shift toward transparency and user control, not hidden decision-making by the platform.

Instead of the app deciding everything behind the scenes, users set their own transaction parameters, so execution reflects their choices, not the platform’s incentives.
Routing is supposed to be objective, based on things like price or speed, not on which path pays the app the most, which removes a lot of the usual conflicts of interest.
The logic behind those routes also cannot be a black box anymore; it has to be disclosed and independently verifiable, so anyone can check how decisions are being made.
And importantly, it explicitly includes connections to decentralized trading systems like AMMs, meaning these standards apply not just to traditional platforms but also to on-chain liquidity.
Put simply, the direction here is clear: less hidden control, more transparency, and systems that can be verified instead of trusted blindly.
The part worth reading twice is everything that gets you kicked out of this lane. No executing trades. No holding user funds or stablecoins. No settling transactions. No giving advice on specific trades. No compensation tied to specific products, venues, or routes. Any interface that starts looking like an intermediary – even slightly – falls back into broker territory and needs full registration.
The exemption expires in five years absent affirmative Commission action. And because it’s a staff statement rather than a formal rule, it creates no enforceable rights. If the SEC changes its mind tomorrow, or a new administration takes a different view, the lane closes. The SEC’s broader safe harbor proposal is moving through a similar provisional process, underlining just how much of the current crypto regulatory framework depends on political continuity rather than durable law.
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