The Missouri House of Representatives is making another bold play to bring cryptocurrency into the state’s financial fold. Lawmakers recently advanced House Bill 2080, a revived piece of legislation designed to establish a formal “Bitcoin Strategic Reserve Fund.” The Bill is now in the House Commerce Committee for a deeper review and has an expected vote by February, 2026. If this Bill moves forward, it will create significant changes in how the Show Me State will manage public treasuries or digital assets in general.
A Second Swing at Digital Asset Legislation
Introduced earlier this year by Republican Representative Ben Keathley, HB 2080 represents Missouri’s ongoing effort to treat Bitcoin as a legitimate, long-term strategic asset. This isn’t Keathley’s first time pushing the concept. In 2025, he introduced a nearly identical measure—House Bill 1217—that made it to a special committee hearing but ultimately fizzled out before receiving a final vote. The new plan is gaining new strength among more conservative voters who want to secure themselves from national inflation, as well as aligning with their company’s treasury strategies.
Building a Treasury Through Donations
The new Bitcoin Strategic Reserve Fund, unlike conventional public/the government fund through taxes, has a different way of obtaining funds. The bill explicitly prohibits the state from dipping into general taxpayer funds to buy Bitcoin outright. Instead, the reserve would grow primarily through voluntary contributions. The Missouri State Treasurer, acting as the fund’s custodian, would be authorized to accept gifts, grants, and bequests of Bitcoin specifically from state residents or local governmental entities. Under the current law, investment by treasurers is narrow due to the fact that the primary purpose of donations will still be the standard requirement for treasurers to utilize their own state fund when investing.
The Five-Year “Cold Storage” Lockup
HB 2080 requires strict storage protocols in order to protect State investment in light of the highly volatile nature of cryptocurrency. Any Bitcoin deposited into the state treasury must be held for a minimum of five years. During this lockup period, the assets are required to be kept in “cold storage”—an offline security method that isolates digital private keys from internet networks to prevent hacking.
After the five-year mark, the treasurer would have the discretion to sell, transfer, or convert the holdings. The bill also mandates contracting with independent, U.S.-based security firms and completely bars any transactions involving foreign entities.
Expanding Crypto for Everyday Taxes
In addition to an established reserve fund, the legislation allows for citizen engagement with government through digital currency. The bill allows state government entities to receive approved cryptocurrencies as payment of various public obligations. This means residents can pay state sales taxes, as well as licensing and court fines using Bitcoin through specific approved digital assets as determined by the Department of Revenue, and likely bear any transaction or service fees associated with these payment methods.
The Legislative Road Ahead
Although there has been considerable progress toward the House Commerce Committee, HB 2080 will still endure an extended process. Before it can reach the Full House Floor, there will need to be a series of hearings held by the public, in addition to a vote on it by committee members. If it passes the House, the Senate will repeat the entire review process. Only after clearing both chambers will it land on Governor Mike Kehoe’s desk. If signed into law, the policy would take effect on August 28, 2026. As industry analysts project growing national demand for digital reserves, all eyes are on Jefferson City.




