Alfa Bank plans to offer crypto services and become a digital depository

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Russia’s biggest private bank wants to hold your crypto. Alfa-Bank has announced plans to launch cryptocurrency services for both individual and corporate clients, with ambitions to operate as a licensed digital depository once new regulations kick in on July 1, 2026.

What Alfa-Bank is actually building

Alfa-Bank isn’t exactly starting from scratch here. The bank launched its A-Token platform back in February 2023, focused on digital financial assets, or DFAs. These are tokenized instruments that exist under Russia’s existing legal framework, essentially a halfway house between traditional securities and full-blown crypto.

A-Token has supported 86 issuances worth RUB 37.5 billion, which accounts for roughly 45% of the total DFA transaction volume in Russia during 2023.

With Russia’s new regulatory framework set to legalize a structured crypto market on July 1, 2026, Alfa-Bank is positioning itself to become a licensed intermediary and digital depository. The bank has also dipped into more creative tokenization projects, including hybrid gold-linked DFAs and tokenizations for subsidiaries of Rosatom, Russia’s state nuclear energy corporation.

Russia’s new crypto rules, explained

The July 1, 2026 date marks the rollout of a comprehensive regulatory framework that will introduce licensed intermediaries for crypto activities, establish rules for crypto exchanges, and create the legal foundation for digital depositories.

Alfa-Bank isn’t the only major Russian bank eyeing this opportunity. Sberbank, the country’s largest state-owned bank, is developing plans for crypto wallets and its own digital depository, with a launch target of December 2026. That gives Alfa-Bank a roughly six-month head start if it hits its July deadline.

Why this matters for global crypto markets

Russia remains under extensive Western sanctions, which limits cross-border capital flows and could restrict how these crypto services interact with global markets.

Alfa-Bank’s 45% share of Russia’s DFA market gives it a significant first-mover advantage in the transition to full crypto services. Whether the July 1 framework launches on schedule, and whether the licensing process moves fast enough for banks to actually operate as planned, remains an open question. Alfa-Bank’s existing infrastructure through A-Token gives it a buffer that newer entrants won’t have, but regulatory delays could still compress that competitive advantage against Sberbank’s December timeline.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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