An increasing amount of Bitcoin is held off-exchange, and courts cannot move these coins without the private key(private key). The amount of BTC on exchanges is at its lowest in years, accounting for only about 14–15% of the circulating supply(equivalent to 2.7–2.8 million BTC).
The rest is stored in institutional custody or personal wallets, where control depends on a 12–24 word recovery phrase. In divorce cases, courts can only divide assets that the legal system can prove exist or must be surrendered—this mechanism changes when assets are self-custodied.
Courts may require disclosure, and failure to comply can result in fines or contempt of court charges. However, judges cannot issue an order to transfer Bitcoin without the private key.
The Legal System is Adapting to Self-Custodied Crypto Reality
England and Wales have enacted the Digital Assets Act 2025, officially recognizing certain digital assets as property rights. The concept of “data objects” by the Legal Committee forms the foundation for this process. Recognition allows courts to issue freezing orders, trace assets, and establish ownership—but it cannot generate private keys.
English courts have repeatedly issued freezing orders on crypto assets in scam cases, and this tool is increasingly applied in civil disputes when assets are discovered.
Family lawyers in the UK and US say that the tracing process often begins with bank statements, tax records, exchange subpoenas, device logs, on-chain analysis, and ultimately lifestyle evidence when blockchain leaves no clear trail.
Owning crypto is no longer a fringe phenomenon: the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) reports that about 12% of adults in the UK held crypto as of August 2024, roughly 7 million people.
Even if most individuals hold small amounts, those motivated to hide assets usually prefer self-custody to avoid reliance on intermediaries.
In courts’ view, “discovery” and “seizure” are increasingly separated. When assets touch KYC platforms, analysis becomes more powerful; cold wallets are entirely beyond direct enforcement.
When regulations tighten but private keys remain inaccessible
A mid-2025 report from Chainalysis recorded over $2.1 billion in losses from crypto theft and showed illicit flows gradually shifting to stablecoins. Blockchain data enables better tracing—so long as transactions pass through an exchange or intermediary.
In the EU, MiCA and the Travel Rule, effective from 2024–2025, require standardization of sender and receiver information when transacting through crypto service providers. The UK is also bringing exchanges under formal regulation.
In the US, broker reporting rules for DeFi were canceled in April 2025, and broad crypto tax reporting only begins in 2026, leading to a more fragmented legal environment. These measures only tighten “intermediaries,” not private keys.
The difference lies in two custody models: if assets are held on a custodial platform, courts can freeze and enforce; self-custody relies entirely on the seed phrase holder.
Reporting orders remain valid, but refusal does not mean the court can immediately seize assets.
The value of Bitcoin held off-exchange is growing, while ETFs are consolidating large amounts of BTC in institutional custody. If the proportion of off-exchange BTC increases by another 2–4 percentage points by the end of 2026, divorce cases involving crypto will see more uncooperative parties and higher asset discounts to reflect the “unrecoverable” risk.
Standard investigation procedures now include bank statements, tax records, exchange subpoenas, device logs, send-receive history, and on-chain cluster analysis. When suspicious signs appear but no private key is available, courts can draw unfavorable inferences, reallocate assets, or increase alimony to compensate for concealment.
Common Solutions: Multisig and Family Custody Models
Multisignature (multisig) wallets, such as 2/3, are being proposed for families. Providers like Casa, Unchained, and Nunchuk offer inheritance and recovery processes, creating templates for prenuptial and postnuptial agreements—where crypto assets are stored in a shared wallet under the oversight of an impartial third party.
The idea is simple: turn “joint assets” into a signing policy on the wallet, ensuring transparent division and enforceable legal custody.
Enforcement Boundaries: Regulations Tighten on Exchanges, but Not on Private Keys
Authorities like OFAC have sanctioned numerous exchanges and mixers, pushing platforms to cooperate more with data subpoenas. Over time, investigations will become faster, data more abundant, and penalties for non-disclosure harsher.
But none of these measures help courts obtain private keys. With self-custody, the most effective measures remain fines, asset discounts, or contempt charges.
Key Takeaway
Regulations may tighten the “touchpoints” of assets— but cannot enforce private keys.
For divorce cases, this means:
Assets that reach exchanges can be traced and divided.
Assets stored solely in self-custody wallets can only be affected indirectly through sanctions, not by coin transfer.
Ultimately, the private key determines how much of the assets can be divided.
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The divorce court is at a loss when digital assets are stored in personal wallets
An increasing amount of Bitcoin is held off-exchange, and courts cannot move these coins without the private key(private key). The amount of BTC on exchanges is at its lowest in years, accounting for only about 14–15% of the circulating supply(equivalent to 2.7–2.8 million BTC).
The rest is stored in institutional custody or personal wallets, where control depends on a 12–24 word recovery phrase. In divorce cases, courts can only divide assets that the legal system can prove exist or must be surrendered—this mechanism changes when assets are self-custodied.
Courts may require disclosure, and failure to comply can result in fines or contempt of court charges. However, judges cannot issue an order to transfer Bitcoin without the private key.
The Legal System is Adapting to Self-Custodied Crypto Reality
England and Wales have enacted the Digital Assets Act 2025, officially recognizing certain digital assets as property rights. The concept of “data objects” by the Legal Committee forms the foundation for this process. Recognition allows courts to issue freezing orders, trace assets, and establish ownership—but it cannot generate private keys.
English courts have repeatedly issued freezing orders on crypto assets in scam cases, and this tool is increasingly applied in civil disputes when assets are discovered.
Family lawyers in the UK and US say that the tracing process often begins with bank statements, tax records, exchange subpoenas, device logs, on-chain analysis, and ultimately lifestyle evidence when blockchain leaves no clear trail.
Owning crypto is no longer a fringe phenomenon: the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) reports that about 12% of adults in the UK held crypto as of August 2024, roughly 7 million people.
Even if most individuals hold small amounts, those motivated to hide assets usually prefer self-custody to avoid reliance on intermediaries.
In courts’ view, “discovery” and “seizure” are increasingly separated. When assets touch KYC platforms, analysis becomes more powerful; cold wallets are entirely beyond direct enforcement.
When regulations tighten but private keys remain inaccessible
A mid-2025 report from Chainalysis recorded over $2.1 billion in losses from crypto theft and showed illicit flows gradually shifting to stablecoins. Blockchain data enables better tracing—so long as transactions pass through an exchange or intermediary.
In the EU, MiCA and the Travel Rule, effective from 2024–2025, require standardization of sender and receiver information when transacting through crypto service providers. The UK is also bringing exchanges under formal regulation.
In the US, broker reporting rules for DeFi were canceled in April 2025, and broad crypto tax reporting only begins in 2026, leading to a more fragmented legal environment. These measures only tighten “intermediaries,” not private keys.
The difference lies in two custody models: if assets are held on a custodial platform, courts can freeze and enforce; self-custody relies entirely on the seed phrase holder.
Reporting orders remain valid, but refusal does not mean the court can immediately seize assets.
Market Impact: Assets Leaving Exchanges, Non-Compliance Risks Rise
The value of Bitcoin held off-exchange is growing, while ETFs are consolidating large amounts of BTC in institutional custody. If the proportion of off-exchange BTC increases by another 2–4 percentage points by the end of 2026, divorce cases involving crypto will see more uncooperative parties and higher asset discounts to reflect the “unrecoverable” risk.
Standard investigation procedures now include bank statements, tax records, exchange subpoenas, device logs, send-receive history, and on-chain cluster analysis. When suspicious signs appear but no private key is available, courts can draw unfavorable inferences, reallocate assets, or increase alimony to compensate for concealment.
Common Solutions: Multisig and Family Custody Models
Multisignature (multisig) wallets, such as 2/3, are being proposed for families. Providers like Casa, Unchained, and Nunchuk offer inheritance and recovery processes, creating templates for prenuptial and postnuptial agreements—where crypto assets are stored in a shared wallet under the oversight of an impartial third party.
The idea is simple: turn “joint assets” into a signing policy on the wallet, ensuring transparent division and enforceable legal custody.
Enforcement Boundaries: Regulations Tighten on Exchanges, but Not on Private Keys
Authorities like OFAC have sanctioned numerous exchanges and mixers, pushing platforms to cooperate more with data subpoenas. Over time, investigations will become faster, data more abundant, and penalties for non-disclosure harsher.
But none of these measures help courts obtain private keys. With self-custody, the most effective measures remain fines, asset discounts, or contempt charges.
Key Takeaway
Regulations may tighten the “touchpoints” of assets— but cannot enforce private keys.
For divorce cases, this means: