Canada's new stablecoin framework will require issuers to maintain 1:1 reserves in high-quality liquid assets, register with the Bank of Canada, and offer at-par redemption to holders. The rules, introduced through the Stablecoin Act in Bill C-15, are expected to come into force in 2027 after a regulatory development period of 12 to 18 months.
What Canada's Stablecoin Framework Requires
The Department of Finance published the framework on March 31, 2026, establishing three core requirements for stablecoin issuers. First, every issuer must register with the Bank of Canada and remain subject to prudential requirements overseen by the central bank.
Second, issuers must maintain a 1:1 reserve of high-quality liquid assets denominated in the stablecoin's reference currency. Reserve assets must at least equal the par value of all outstanding stablecoins, be composed of the reference currency or approved liquid assets, and be held with qualified custodians separate from both the issuer's and custodian's other assets.
Third, issuers must publish a redemption policy and guarantee at-par redemption in the referenced fiat currency. This requirement echoes Circle's approach with its 1:1 backed tokens, where full reserve backing is central to maintaining holder confidence.
Parliament's legislative summary adds further obligations: issuers cannot operate unless they are listed on the Bank of Canada's public registry, and they must submit reports at least monthly. These reporting and registry requirements give the Bank of Canada ongoing visibility into the stablecoin market rather than relying on periodic audits alone.
Who the Rules Apply to and What They Do Not Cover
The framework targets fiat-backed stablecoins specifically, not all digital assets. Algorithmic stablecoins, crypto-collateralized tokens, and other digital asset categories fall outside its scope.
Both domestic and foreign issuers are covered if they make fiat-backed stablecoins available to Canadians, whether directly or indirectly. This extraterritorial reach means offshore issuers cannot avoid compliance simply by operating from another jurisdiction while serving Canadian users.
One important limitation: the framework only regulates issuance by non-financial institutions. Banks and other federally regulated financial institutions that issue stablecoins would remain under their existing supervisory regimes. Trading and exchange activity also stays under existing securities-regulator oversight, keeping the framework narrowly focused on the issuance layer.
This distinction matters for the broader crypto industry. As market activity continues to pick up, the separation between issuance regulation and trading regulation means exchanges listing Canadian-compliant stablecoins will not face additional requirements under this specific framework.
When the Framework Starts and Why It Matters
Despite the legislation receiving Royal Assent, the stablecoin framework is not yet fully operational. The Department of Finance expects the regulatory development process to take 12 to 18 months from early 2026, placing the expected in-force date in 2027.
During this interim period, supporting regulations covering the specifics of reserve composition, custodian qualifications, reporting templates, and enforcement mechanisms will be drafted and finalized. Issuers serving Canadians should treat this window as preparation time rather than a grace period.
The combination of reserve segregation, qualified custodian rules, a public registry, and monthly reporting creates a compliance framework that prioritizes redemption reliability. If a stablecoin issuer fails, the segregated reserves held with independent custodians are designed to protect holders from losing access to their funds.
Canada's approach complements its existing Retail Payment Activities Act and positions the country alongside other jurisdictions tightening stablecoin oversight. With global crypto policy discussions shifting across venues, the Canadian framework adds another reference point for how nations are choosing to regulate the intersection of digital assets and traditional finance.
For issuers currently operating without formal Canadian registration, the 2027 timeline offers a defined path to compliance, but also a deadline. Those unable to meet the reserve, custody, and reporting standards will need to stop serving Canadian users once the framework takes effect.
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.