
Canada’s federal authorities has moved to ban cryptocurrency donations to political campaigns, shutting down a fundraising channel that seems to have seen little to no real-world use within the nation’s earlier elections.
Bill C-25, the Strong and Free Elections Act, introduced March 26, would prohibit political contributions made in BTC and different cryptoassets, in addition to in cash orders and pay as you go cost merchandise, grouping them as types of funding which can be troublesome to hint.
The ban applies broadly throughout the political system, protecting registered events, using associations, candidates, management and nomination contestants, and third events engaged in election promoting.
The transfer comes as U.Okay. authorities has additionally recently announced a direct moratorium on cryptocurrency donations to political events, citing issues that digital property might be used to disguise the origins of international cash in British politics.
Second try
Canada’s Bill C-25 addresses a theoretical vulnerability reasonably than a documented drawback.
Canada has permitted crypto donations since 2019 underneath an administrative framework that categorised them as non-monetary contributions, related to property. But no main federal get together has publicly accepted crypto, and no contributions have been disclosed in both the 2021 or 2025 elections.
Under the 2019 framework, contributions weren’t eligible for tax receipts, a major disincentive in a system the place donors routinely declare credit.
Contributors of greater than $200 had to be publicly recognized by title and tackle. Only cryptocurrencies with verifiable public blockchains certified — privateness cash corresponding to Monero or ZCash have been excluded. Candidates had to liquidate holdings into fiat earlier than spending.
Yet the Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) grew more and more uncomfortable with the association.
In a June 2022 post-election report, the CEO advisable adopting tighter guidelines for crypto contributions, together with eliminating a provision that deemed contributions of $200 or much less from non-professional sellers to have nil worth, successfully exempting them from the regulated financing regime.
By November 2024, the CEO’s position had shifted from regulate to prohibit, recommending an outright ban on the grounds that cryptocurrency’s pseudo-anonymity creates transparency challenges and that contributor identification is “fundamentally difficult.”
Bill C-25 is the second try to enact a crypto donation ban. Its predecessor, Bill C-65, contained identical provisions however died when Parliament was prorogued in January 2025.
The new invoice offers recipients 30 days to return, destroy, or convert and remit any crypto contributions obtained in violation of the ban, with proceeds forwarded to the Receiver General. Maximum administrative penalties attain twice the worth of the offending contribution, plus $100,000 for firms.
In the United States, the Federal Election Commission provides guidance on how to correctly disclose BTC and different crypto donations to campaigns. Crypto donations have been permitted within the U.S. since 2014.
Canada’s invoice is at the moment at first studying within the House of Commons.



