Florida joins Bitcoin reserve race with first committee approval of HB 487

Florida has taken its first legislative step toward embracing Bitcoin as a state-held asset, joining the race led by Arizona and closely followed by New Hampshire.

Florida is the latest U.S. state to make strides toward adopting Bitcoin (BTC) as a strategic reserve asset, as its House Bill 487 (HB 487) passed through the House Insurance and Banking Subcommittee with unanimous support on April 10 hearing.

The bill, titled โ€œInvestments of Public Funds in Bitcoin,โ€ proposes allowing Floridaโ€™s Chief Financial Officer and State Board of Administration to invest up to 10% of key public funds โ€” including the General Revenue Fund and Budget Stabilization Fund โ€” into Bitcoin. It outlines strict custody, security, and compliance protocols, and also enables Bitcoin held by the state to be loaned out or used in exchange-traded products.

Having cleared the first of four committees, HB 487 must still pass through the Government Operations Subcommittee, the Ways & Means Committee, and the Commerce Committee before heading to the full House for a vote. If passed by the House, the bill will move to the Senate for consideration and, ultimately, the governorโ€™s desk.

Floridaโ€™s push comes amid a wider trend across U.S. states exploring Bitcoin as a sovereign asset class.

According to Bitcoin Laws, Arizona appears to be leading the legislative race. As of late March, its Senate Bills 1373 and 1025 โ€” both related to digital asset reserves โ€” have passed through the Senate and cleared the House Rules Committee. These bills are now headed for a full House vote. If successful, they would only require Governor Katie Hobbsโ€™ signature to become law, making Arizona the first state to officially adopt a Bitcoin reserve policy.

Source: Bitcoin Laws

Meanwhile, New Hampshire has also advanced its Bitcoin reserve bill (HB 302), which passed the full House in a 192-179 vote and is now under Senate review. The bill would allow the state treasurer to allocate up to 10% of authorized funds into Bitcoin and precious metals, but only assets with a market cap exceeding $500 billion โ€” a threshold currently met only by Bitcoin โ€” would qualify.

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