Arizona’s Bitcoin Reserve Bill: Will Lawmakers Finally Push It Through the House in 2025?
Arizona's legislature is back at it—dusting off the Bitcoin reserve bill that's been circulating like a meme stock. Will this be the year politicians finally grasp the future, or just another delay before the inevitable?
Why This Matters Now
With institutional adoption surging and states like Texas already flirting with crypto reserves, Arizona’s move could tip the scales. No more theoretical debates—this is about cold, hard treasury strategy.
The Political Hurdles
Opponents still cling to volatility fears—ignoring the 200% BTC rallies that outpace their beloved bonds. Meanwhile, Wall Street quietly stacks SATs behind closed doors.
The Bottom Line
Whether this passes or not, the trend is clear: fiat loyalists are becoming the flat-earthers of finance. Arizona’s vote isn’t just about a bill—it’s a litmus test for who actually understands 21st century value storage.

'Bitcoin Reserve' bill HB2324, which initially failed, has been revived after a 'motion to reconsider'.
The bill WOULD create a fund out of digital assets seized via criminal asset forfeiture.
It passed the Senate today 16-14, and is now in the House. pic.twitter.com/FKmLr8kSmJ — Bitcoin Laws (@Bitcoin_Laws) June 19, 2025
Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, has vetoed several bills since last year – the highest rate among U.S. governors. In May, she rejected the bill, citing concerns over risk.
Her rejection sparked criticism from Bitcoin advocates and some government officials. Wendy Rogers, who co-sponsored the bill, expressed her disappointment and pledged to reintroduce it in the next legislative session.
“Politicians don’t understand that Bitcoin doesn’t need Arizona. Arizona needs Bitcoin,” Rogers said at the time.
This is What the Bill Outlines
The Republican-backed bill came to the Senate’s reconsideration after entirely going through party lines. Republican Senator Jane Shamp filed the motion to reconsider, who originally voted against the bill.
The proposed legislation outlines three options for handling seized crypto assets. This includes storage in state-approved digital wallets, sale through licensed crypto exchanges or retaining in native form.
Further, the bill rolls out the allocation of funds obtained from the sales of forfeited digital assets. It proposes to allocate the first $300,000 to the Anti-Racketeering Revolving Fund. If the sale price exceeds $300K, the balance would be split — 50% to the same fund, 25% to the state’s General Fund, and 25% to the newly established BTC Reserve Fund.
Will the Bill be Enacted This Time Amid Rejections?
Notably, Governor Hobbs has already signed HB2749 into law, establishing a state-managed Bitcoin reserve fund that will hold unclaimed digital assets and staking rewards. With the signing in May, Arizona became the second US state to create a formal framework for holding crypto.
Meanwhile, the state is also reviewing other pro-crypto bills centering crypto security, kiosks, and payments.
Arizona Governor Hobbs has previously pointed to the current volatility in cryptocurrency markets for vetoing the legislation before. However, given BTC’s long-term bullish signal, there are high chances of upcoming BTC-friendly bill approvals.
Additionally, at the federal level, the stablecoin GENIUS bill passed the Senate with a majority of votes. President TRUMP showed his enthusiasm for the new legislation, calling it an “incredible bill.”
“Get it to my desk, ASAP — NO DELAYS, NO ADD ONS,” he wrote on Truth Social recently, adding that it is American brilliance at its best.