Malta Weighs Legal Framework for DAOs and DeFi Projects

Maltaโ€™s financial regulator has issued a discussion paper outlining a potential legal framework for decentralized finance (DeFi), including recognition of decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), as European policymakers continue to grapple with how to regulate blockchain-based financial services.

On June 12, the Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA) opened a public consultation on DeFi under the European Unionโ€™s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation. The paper invites industry feedback through July 10 and proposes a new legal category for so-called โ€œsoftware-based organizations,โ€ which would encompass DAOs and other software-governed DeFi entities.

Rather than treating DAOs as a standalone legal concept, the MFSA suggests recognizing them as a type of software-based organization, separating the legal framework governing the organization itself from the rules governing the underlying protocol and software.

The discussion paper builds on Maltaโ€™s long-standing role in the digital asset industry, having introduced one of the regionโ€™s first comprehensive crypto regulatory frameworks in 2018. While stressing that fully decentralized services generally fall outside MiCAโ€™s scope, the regulator argues that many DeFi projects retain centralized features that complicate claims of decentralization and raise questions about regulatory accountability.

โ€œMiCA excludes fully decentralised models from its regulatory scope, meaning that projects without intermediaries or central control may not need to comply with MiCA,โ€ the paper states.

The MFSA outlines the scope of the DeFi discussion paper. Source: MFSA

Related: DAOs may need to ditch decentralization to court institutions

EU regulators increasingly turn attention to DeFi

Malta’s discussion paper comes amid a broader push across the European Union to clarify how decentralized finance and decentralized autonomous organizations should be treated under MiCA.

In March, a European Central Bank working paper found that governance and control across four major DeFi protocols remained highly concentrated, suggesting many projects may struggle to qualify as โ€œfully decentralizedโ€ and therefore fall outside MiCA’s scope.

The debate continued in May, when the European Commission launched a targeted review of MiCA seeking feedback on issues including stablecoin interest payments, the treatment of DeFi and whether gaps in the framework warrant additional regulation.

However, not everyone believes a new DeFi rulebook is necessary. Speaking to Cointelegraph at the WAIB Summit Monaco earlier this month, European Commission adviser Peter Kerstens said policymakers should prioritize integrating tokenization into a broader digital asset framework rather than pursuing a second version of MiCA focused on DeFi.

European Commission adviser Peter Kerstens (right) speaks with Cointelegraphโ€™s Zoltan Vardai. Source: WAIB Summit 2026

Related: Crypto firms face July 1 EU cutoff as MiCA grace period ends

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