#WhenWillCLARITYActPass The Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act (often just “CLARITY Act”) is a piece of proposed U.S. legislation aimed at creating clear federal rules for cryptocurrencies and digital assets. Its goal is to remove regulatory uncertainty by defining which government agencies (like the SEC or CFTC) oversee different types of tokens and market activities, and how they should be regulated. The bill was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives in 2025 and is now being debated in the U.S. Senate as part of broader efforts to establish a unified crypto regu

MEXC

🔍 Why It’s Taking Time

After passing the House, the bill has faced negotiations and revisions in Senate committees, particularly over issues like how stablecoins should be treated and whether platforms can offer yield or rewards. �

UPay Blog

Lawmakers, regulators, and industry groups are working to resolve technical disagreements — a normal part of passing major legislation.

📆 When Is It Likely to Pass?

There’s no official date yet, but current projections from political figures and industry observers suggest:

Some U.S. lawmakers — including Senator Bernie Moreno — have said the Act could clear Congress by April 2026 if talks continue smoothly. �

CoinCentral

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse has publicly predicted an ~80% chance the Act will be passed by the end of April 2026. �

Coin Edition

Real-time prediction markets (like Polymarket) show fluctuating odds — at times as high as 90% but then backing down to around 70% — reflecting ongoing uncertainty among traders and observers. �

KuCoin

🧠 In Simple Terms

The hashtag #WhenWillCLARITYActPass is used by people trying to guess or pressure lawmakers on when final approval will happen.

Right now, Spring 2026 (especially by April) is widely seen as the most realistic target if negotiations hold up and Congressional scheduling cooperates.

📌 Why It Matters

If passed, the CLARITY Act would bring more regulatory clarity and legal cinty to the cryptocurrency industry in the U.S., which many companies argue is key for grow