Arizona’s two flagship crypto bills, SB1042 and SB1649, cleared the House Rules Committee on March 30, 2026, with unanimous 8-0 votes, advancing them toward a full House floor vote and marking one of the most significant state-level digital asset policy moves in recent months.
The Arizona House Rules Committee passed both bills with 8-0 votes, a procedural step confirming the measures are constitutional and in proper form. House majority and minority caucus sessions for both bills were scheduled for March 31, 2026.
SB1042, officially titled “public monies; investment; virtual currency,” would allow any public fund in Arizona to invest up to 10% of the public monies under its control in virtual currency. The bill had already passed the House Ways and Means Committee with a 5-3 vote before reaching Rules.
SB1649, titled “digital assets strategic reserve fund,” would create a state-managed reserve consisting of legislative appropriations and digital assets that have been seized, confiscated, or surrendered to the state. The fund would be administered by the state treasurer. It cleared the House Commerce Committee with a 7-3 vote prior to its Rules advancement.
Clearing the Rules Committee is an advancement step, not final passage. Both bills had already been approved by the Arizona Senate and would still need full House floor approval and the governor’s signature to become law.
Cointelegraph described the development as putting the bills “on a fast track to a full House vote,” though official Arizona Legislature records confirm only the Rules clearance and caucus scheduling, with no recorded House Committee of the Whole or third-reading action at the time of reporting.
Source: @Cointelegraph on X
Arizona is now among a small group of U.S. states actively pursuing legislation that would commit public funds to digital assets. SB1042’s 10% allocation cap for public monies represents a measured approach, while SB1649’s strategic reserve fund would create an entirely new category of state-held digital assets, including those obtained through law enforcement seizures.
The distinction matters for traders, builders, and policy watchers. A state treasury allocating even a fraction of its holdings to virtual currency would create direct institutional demand at a time when Bitcoin whale selling has outpaced buying near the $68K level. State-level moves can also influence how other legislatures approach similar proposals.
For corporate treasuries evaluating crypto exposure, Arizona’s framework could serve as a template. Ripple’s recent launch of a crypto treasury platform for corporates reflects growing demand for institutional-grade digital asset management, a trend that state-level adoption would accelerate.
The regulatory context is also important to track. These are bills from the Fifty-seventh Legislature’s Second Regular Session, and a House Rules C&P action confirms constitutional compliance, not legislative certainty. The bills face a floor vote where outcomes remain uncertain.
Arizona’s committee advancement is the clearest policy signal from the last 24 hours. The unanimous 8-0 Rules Committee votes on both bills suggest bipartisan procedural support, even as the substantive committee votes (5-3 on SB1042, 7-3 on SB1649) reflect some opposition on the merits.
The timing aligns with broader momentum in digital asset policy across the United States. State legislatures have increasingly become the testing ground for crypto regulation, moving faster than federal bodies on questions of public fund allocation and reserve management.
Market participants watching for catalysts beyond price action may note that developments like Arizona’s reserve fund proposal, alongside moves such as the SpaceX IPO filing report, point to a widening intersection between traditional finance infrastructure and digital assets.
The next concrete milestone for SB1042 and SB1649 is the House floor vote. If both pass, they move to the governor’s desk. Arizona’s legislative session calendar will determine the timeline, but the March 31 caucus dates suggest floor action could come within days rather than weeks.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

