Polish President Vetoes Controversial Crypto Bill for Second Time - Regulatory Gridlock Deepens

Warsaw's crypto regulation hits another wall—the presidential veto pen strikes twice.
Deja Vu in the Legislature
For the second time, Poland's head of state has blocked a proposed framework for digital assets, sending lawmakers back to the drawing board. The move creates a prolonged vacuum of legal clarity, leaving exchanges and investors navigating a gray zone that would make a traditional compliance officer break out in hives.
The Sticking Points
While the official reasoning cites concerns over consumer protection and financial stability, industry whispers point to deeper clashes over oversight powers and taxation models. The veto essentially pauses a process that many hoped would align Poland with broader EU digital finance ambitions. Meanwhile, trading volumes continue, unbothered by parliamentary procedure—proving once again that markets often move faster than legislation.
What's Next for Poland's Crypto Scene?
The double veto doesn't outlaw crypto activity; it just keeps it in a regulatory limbo. Projects operating under temporary guidelines now face extended uncertainty. Some analysts suggest this could push innovation underground or toward friendlier jurisdictions, while others see it as a cautious approach that might prevent a rushed, flawed law. After all, in finance, sometimes the most profitable move is to delay a decision until everyone forgets what was at stake.
Poland's crypto community is left watching, waiting, and probably trading anyway.
Polish president vetoes controversial crypto bill for second time
Poland’s head of state, Karol Nawrocki, has imposed another veto on the government-proposed legal framework for the country’s crypto market, arguably the largest in Eastern Europe.
On Thursday, the president returned the document again, which saw little change since the last time it was rejected amid a bitter political clash with the ruling coalition.
The Polish “Crypto-Asset Market Act” should transpose the provisions of the EU’s Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) regulation into national law.
However, members of the local crypto community have been complaining its sponsors have gone far beyond the latest European requirements.
One of the points of contention has been the granting of what some see as excessive oversight powers to the Polish Financial Supervision Authority (KNF).
For example, the agency will be able to suspend or prohibit public offerings of cryptocurrencies and their trading, as noted in a report by Telewizja Polska (TVP), Poland’s national broadcaster.
The KNF will be able to impose sanctions on issuers, service providers and trading platforms, including financial penalties for violations by intermediaries engaged in processing crypto transactions.
The authority will also maintain a register of internet domains suspected of fraudulent activities in the crypto space, in order to ensure protection for customers and other market participants.
Criminal liability has been introduced for the issuing of tokens or the provision of services without notifying the KNF as well as fines of up to 10 million złoty ($2.8 million) for the most serious offenses.
Future of Polish crypto law remains uncertain
Poland’s crypto act should now go back to the parliament in Warsaw. The government-sponsored bill was first stopped by President Nawrocki at the end of last November.
The Sejm, the lower house of the legislature, failed to overcome his veto and sent it to the Senate. The upper house introduced its own amendments, most of which were later rejected by the Sejm.
Members of the latter reduced a “supervisory fee” to be charged by the KNF, from 0.4% to 0.1% of the revenue generated by market participants.
This was the only significant revision of the document before it returned to Nawrocki’s desk, amid wide expectations he was going to veto it again.
In an apparent attempt to up the pressure on the president, the KNF warned earlier this week that all domestic crypto platforms will become illegal on July 1, if the law is not passed and signed by then.
In the motives for his veto on the nearly identical first draft, the head of state said it was offering excessive, ambiguous, and disproportionate solutions.
He added that the legal framework put forward by ruling coalition endangered the freedoms of Poles, their property rights, and even the stability of Poland.
The executive power and the parliamentary majority returned fire by launching an investigation into Nawrocki’s connections to the industry, which as its representatives claim, has been infiltrated by players linked to Russia and other nations in the post-Soviet space.
Members of the sector previously warned that the legislation, in its current version, literary threatens the very survival of domestic crypto firms, which are likely to relocate to more favorable jurisdictions in Europe, such as the Baltic states.
The draft will now return to the parliament of Poland, where Tusk doesn’t have the necessary three-fifths majority to overcome Nawrocki’s veto. And if it remains in limbo, Polish companies will be forced to MOVE their offices abroad and apply for MiCA licensed there, the Bitcoin.pl portal noted in a report on the latest development.
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