Indiana Governor Signs Bill Allowing Bitcoin In State Retirement Plans

Share This Post

Indiana Gov. Mike Braun has signed legislation allowing bitcoin and cryptocurrency investments in the state’s public retirement and savings plans, opening the door for state employees to gain exposure to digital assets through self-directed accounts.

The measure, House Bill 1042, requires Indiana’s public retirement boards, deferred compensation committees, and annuity savings programs to offer self-directed brokerage accounts that include at least one cryptocurrency investment option by July 1, 2027. 

The accounts will allow participants to allocate a portion of their retirement savings to bitcoin, crypto assets, or crypto-linked exchange-traded funds, subject to investment guidelines and oversight established by plan administrators.

Under the law, participants will be able to select and manage their own cryptocurrency holdings alongside traditional assets such as stocks, bonds, and ETFs. Retirement boards will retain authority to set allocation limits, establish administrative fees, and ensure that account valuations reflect prevailing market prices.

The legislation defines cryptocurrency as a virtual currency not issued by a central authority that functions as a medium of exchange and relies on encryption to regulate issuance, verify transfers, and prevent counterfeiting. Indiana lawmakers said the definition provides clarity for public investment programs evaluating digital asset exposure.

Indiana and other U.S. states love bitcoin

With the bill’s passage, Indiana joins a growing list of states exploring the integration of bitcoin and crypto products into public investment portfolios.The proposal comes amid growing interest from U.S. states and municipalities in incorporating digital assets into public portfolios, reflecting broader trends in cryptocurrency adoption and financial innovation.

South Dakota recently introduced House Bill 1155, which would allow the state to invest up to 10% of public funds in Bitcoin.

Earlier this year, Rhode Island lawmakers introduced Senate Bill S2021 to temporarily exempt small Bitcoin transactions from state income and capital gains taxes, with a $5,000 monthly and $20,000 annual cap. 

The bill treats Bitcoin as a “digital, decentralized currency” and allows residents and Rhode Island–based businesses to self-certify eligibility while keeping simple records. 

The exemption would take effect January 1, 2027, and expire January 1, 2028, as a pilot program to reduce tax friction on everyday Bitcoin use.

New Hampshire is another state actively championing Bitcoin.

In May 2025, New Hampshire became the first U.S. state to allow its treasury to invest in Bitcoin and other large-cap digital assets, authorizing up to 5% of certain public funds to be allocated into crypto under House Bill 302. BTC currently qualifies under the market-cap rule.

Related Posts

Arthur Hayes Confirmed As A Bitcoin 2026 Speaker

Arthur Hayes, one of the most provocative and incisive...

X Warns Against Creator Payouts Over Undisclosed AI War Videos

In brief X's product head, Nikita Bier, said creators posting...

Ethereum Exodus Continues: Supply On Crypto Exchanges Dries Up To Years-Long Low

Trusted Editorial content, reviewed by leading industry experts and...

Former LAPD Officer Convicted In $350,000 Bitcoin Kidnapping And Home Invasion

A Los Angeles County jury has found former Los...

Gemini 3.1 Flash-Lite Offers Choice on How It Processes Inputs

Enterprise developers can now choose the level of thinking...