Tennessee’s Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Act has been recommended for passage and referred to the Finance, Ways, and Means Committee, advancing a bill that would authorize up to 10% of certain state funds to be held in Bitcoin.
The core mechanism is straightforward. Tennessee’s state treasurer would be authorized to allocate up to 10% of the General Fund and the Revenue Fluctuation Reserve into Bitcoin. The acquisition is phased: annual purchases are capped at 5% of a fiscal year until the 10% ceiling is reached. That pacing prevents a large one-time purchase and spreads the exposure accumulation over multiple budget cycles.
The bill is Bitcoin-only. Not digital assets broadly, not Ethereum, not a basket of cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin specifically, explicitly barring everything else. That restriction reflects the legislative framing around Bitcoin as a distinct category from crypto broadly, the same framing that shows up in federal legislation like the CLARITY Act and in other state reserve bills. Whether that distinction holds up to scrutiny on its merits is a separate debate. Politically, it makes the bill easier to defend.
Custody requirements are specific. The state must use secure custody solutions requiring multi-party authorization and geographically dispersed, non-network-connected hardware. That’s essentially an air-gapped cold storage mandate with multi-signature access control, which is the institutional standard for large Bitcoin holdings.
The tax payment provision is voluntary. Taxpayers who want to pay state taxes and fees in Bitcoin could do so if the bill passes. This is the more novel element, less about treasury management and more about normalizing Bitcoin as a transactional medium in a government context.
The Finance, Ways, and Means Committee will now review the bill’s fiscal impact and structural feasibility. If it clears committee, passes the legislature, and gets signed into law, the effective date is July 1, 2026.
From there, the State Treasurer would file an initial investment policy by January 1, 2027. A full performance review wouldn’t be due until October 1, 2032. That six-year review window reflects the long-term holding philosophy baked into the bill, consistent with the Bitwise data covered earlier this week showing that Bitcoin investors with five-plus year holding periods have historically recorded zero losses.
Tennessee joins Texas, Missouri, and West Virginia among states that have explored or implemented similar frameworks in 2025 and 2026. The state-level Bitcoin reserve movement has been building quietly alongside federal legislative discussions, with individual states moving at different speeds depending on their political composition and treasury management frameworks.
The Tennessee bill’s Bitcoin-only mandate and 10% allocation cap are broadly consistent with the bills introduced in other states, suggesting some degree of coordination or at minimum shared template language across the movement. None of the state bills require action, they authorize it. Whether a state treasurer actually uses the authority once it’s granted is a separate question from whether the bill passes.
That distinction matters for evaluating the practical significance of state reserve legislation. A bill that passes and authorizes 10% Bitcoin allocation is a policy signal. Actual Bitcoin purchases from state treasuries would be a market signal. The two are related but not the same thing.
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