Page Last Reviewed: July 7, 2026
More than 16 months after President Trump signed the executive order creating a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, the U.S. government still hasn’t formally designated which agency will manage it, hasn’t disclosed its full holdings, and hasn’t acquired a single new bitcoin. The holdup, according to a Bloomberg report that broke July 6, comes down to an unresolved dispute between the Treasury Department and the Commerce Department over who has the legal authority to hold roughly 328,372 BTC — worth an estimated $20 billion to $21 billion — indefinitely as a policy asset rather than liquidating it under standard forfeiture rules.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Established | March 6, 2025 (Executive Order 14233) |
| Current BTC Holdings | ~328,372 BTC |
| Estimated Value | ~$20–21 billion (as of July 7, 2026) |
| Funding Source | Forfeited/seized assets only — no taxpayer funds |
| Managing Agency | Undetermined (Treasury vs. Commerce dispute ongoing) |
| Supporting Legislation | ARMA Act (unpassed) |
| New Purchases to Date | None |
The Strategic Bitcoin Reserve was established by executive order in March 2025, alongside a separate U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile for non-Bitcoin holdings. The order directed the Treasury Secretary to create an office to manage the reserve, composed of Bitcoin the government already controls through criminal and civil forfeiture across agencies including the DOJ, IRS, and U.S. Marshals Service. The order also stipulated that reserve Bitcoin should not be sold and should be retained as a long-term reserve asset — a marked departure from the government’s historical practice of auctioning off seized cryptocurrency.
Unlike a traditional reserve meant to be tapped during emergencies, the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve is designed to be held indefinitely, which is precisely what has made its legal implementation more complicated than initially expected.
The core obstacle is a jurisdictional dispute between two federal departments:
Beyond the interagency dispute, forfeited BTC is currently scattered across multiple agencies under different legal authorities, meaning any consolidation into a single Treasury-controlled custody structure requires resolving which agency can legally transfer what — and whether that requires congressional sign-off.
The White House, through spokeswoman Liz Huston, confirmed on July 6 that the administration “continues to evaluate the best structure” for the reserve, indicating the process remains active but incomplete.
Congress has not passed legislation to formally codify the reserve. The ARMA Act — an updated version of the earlier BITCOIN Act first introduced in July 2024 — would authorize the government to acquire up to 1 million BTC over five years using budget-neutral strategies, such as reallocating other government assets rather than new spending. Under the proposed bill, acquired Bitcoin would be held for a minimum of 20 years, with sales permitted only to reduce the national debt. White House Digital Assets Advisor Patrick Witt has described ARMA as “version 2.0” of the original bill. Without its passage, agencies have limited legal footing to expand the reserve beyond existing forfeited holdings.
The ARMA Act is separate from the two other major pieces of crypto legislation moving through Washington this year — the CLARITY Act, which addresses market-structure rules for digital assets, and the GENIUS Act, which governs stablecoin regulation. Together, the three bills represent the main legislative tracks shaping how the U.S. treats crypto at the federal level, though only GENIUS has been signed into law so far.
Estimates place U.S. government Bitcoin holdings at approximately 328,372 BTC, worth roughly $20–21 billion depending on the current bitcoin price. This stockpile was built primarily from major law enforcement seizures, including Bitcoin connected to the Silk Road marketplace and the 2016 Bitfinex hack. The U.S. is currently recognized as the largest known government holder of Bitcoin worldwide, ahead of China, the United Kingdom, and El Salvador. No new Bitcoin has been purchased on the open market since the reserve was announced.
Searches for “United States Crypto Reserve” frequently surface a cryptocurrency called USCR, listed on platforms including CoinMarketCap and Crypto.com. This token has no affiliation with the U.S. government, the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, or any federal agency. It appears to be an independent project using a name similar to the official policy initiative. Readers researching the actual government reserve should rely on official sources such as the White House’s published executive order and fact sheet rather than crypto exchange listings.

