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What Is the Howey Test? How It Determines Whether Crypto Is a Security

Scales of justice with Bitcoin and Ethereum symbols in front of a US courthouse
The Howey Test remains the primary legal framework for classifying digital assets. AXT News

The Howey Test is the cornerstone legal framework used by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to determine whether a transaction qualifies as an "investment contract" — and therefore a security. Originating from a 1946 Supreme Court case involving Florida orange groves, the test has become the single most important legal concept in cryptocurrency regulation.

Understanding how the Howey Test works is essential for crypto investors, project founders, and legal practitioners. In March 2026, it gained renewed prominence when the SEC and CFTC jointly classified 16 major crypto assets as digital commodities using a revised version of this very framework.

The Four Prongs of the Howey Test

Under the Howey Test, a transaction is classified as a security if it involves all four of the following elements:

  1. An investment of money — The buyer commits capital (fiat or crypto) with the expectation of financial return.
  2. In a common enterprise — The investment is pooled with others, creating shared financial fortunes among investors.
  3. With an expectation of profits — The investor anticipates earning a return on their investment.
  4. Derived from the efforts of others — The profits are primarily generated by a third party or promoter, not through the investor's own efforts.

If all four conditions are met, the asset is classified as a security and must comply with SEC registration requirements. If any prong fails, the asset may instead fall under CFTC commodity oversight.

How the Howey Test Applies to Cryptocurrency

The application of the Howey Test to digital assets has been contentious. Bitcoin, for example, has long been considered a commodity because no central promoter drives its value — it is a sufficiently decentralised network. Ethereum's classification was debated for years before the SEC acknowledged it as a commodity.

However, many newer tokens — particularly those sold through Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) — have been found to satisfy all four Howey prongs. When a project team raises funds by selling tokens, promising to build a platform that will increase token value, the SEC has consistently argued this constitutes a securities offering.

The 2026 Revised Framework

In what many observers call the most significant regulatory development in years, the SEC introduced a revised Howey Test framework in March 2026. This updated approach accounts for the unique characteristics of decentralised networks by evaluating:

This revised framework was central to the landmark classification of 16 crypto assets as commodities, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and XRP.

Why It Matters for Investors

The classification of a crypto asset as a security versus a commodity has significant practical implications:

Notable Howey Test Cases in Crypto

Several high-profile enforcement actions have shaped how the Howey Test is applied to digital assets:

These cases established important precedents that continue to guide regulatory enforcement. Blockchain forensics firms like AI Data Intelligence increasingly factor regulatory classification into their compliance tools and tracing reports.

Looking Ahead

The evolution of the Howey Test framework suggests that regulators are moving toward a more nuanced approach to digital asset classification. The introduction of mandatory licensing in Australia and stablecoin regulation in Delaware demonstrate that jurisdictions worldwide are developing complementary frameworks.

For investors, understanding whether a crypto asset passes or fails the Howey Test remains one of the most important due diligence steps before committing capital. As Blockchain Legal Solutions advises: "Always verify the regulatory status of any digital asset before investing."