Coinbase has officially launched crypto staking services in New York, allowing residents of the state to earn rewards on assets like ETH and SOL for the first time. The move, announced on X earlier today, marks a milestone for the exchange, which now offers staking in 46 U.S. states.
The exchange credited New York Governor Kathy Hochul’s administration for providing regulatory clarity, framing the decision as a win for local investors who had been excluded from staking opportunities available elsewhere.
Coinbase noted that states like California, Maryland, and New Jersey have collectively missed out on over $130 million in staking rewards due to ongoing restrictions.
Coinbase emphasized that staking remains a non-security activity, citing recent SEC staff guidance and state-level dismissals of related cases in Kentucky, Vermont, Illinois, Alabama, and South Carolina. “This is a big win for New Yorkers and another step toward ensuring every American has equal access to the future of finance,” the company wrote.
Coinbase’s regulatory pivot
The New York expansion comes as Coinbase deepens its engagement with U.S. regulators. Earlier this month, the company filed an application with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) for a National Trust Company Charter, a move designed to unify its state-based operations under a clearer federal framework.
If approved, the charter would let Coinbase expand beyond custody and staking into payments and lending. It’s 2015 New York trust license already makes it one of crypto’s earliest regulated players.
Linking New York to Washington
By pairing its New York staking launch with its OCC charter bid, Coinbase is effectively testing a dual strategy: expanding access to crypto participation while tightening its compliance architecture. Both moves highlight Coinbase’s push to create a federally recognized framework for digital assets that balances innovation with traditional financial oversight.
Coinbase’s approach contrasts with competitors that continue to operate under fragmented state frameworks. The OCC filing, alongside the New York approval, signals a long-term strategy to integrate staking, custody, and payments under a single, federally regulated umbrella.
Coinbase’s twin moves, staking in New York and a federal charter bid, mark its push to evolve from exchange to regulated digital bank. Now, it’s up to U.S. regulators to decide if the country can keep pace with its own crypto innovation.
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