Why Vancouver Halted the Bitcoin Reserve: Legal Review Findings
Vancouver city staff have recommended halting a proposal to explore a municipal Bitcoin reserve after a legal review found cryptocurrencies are barred under the Vancouver Charter. As reported by Blockonomi, the review concluded Bitcoin is not an allowable investment asset for city reserve funds under the city’s governing statute.
The finding means the city cannot hold Bitcoin (BTC) in municipal reserve funds under existing law, according to Coinfomania. Staff advised council to close the motion on that basis, ending the study phase before any pilot or implementation.
City officials also recommended councillors abandon broader efforts to integrate Bitcoin into municipal finances, as covered by Crypto.news. The move pauses an initiative that had been framed by proponents as aligning Vancouver with jurisdictions considering digital assets in public finance.
What the Vancouver Charter and B.C. Rules Allow or Bar
Municipal investment frameworks in British Columbia prioritize capital preservation, liquidity, and statutory compliance. In practice, this confines reserve portfolios to assets explicitly permitted by law; the staff review indicates cryptocurrencies fall outside that list under the Vancouver Charter. That interpretation leaves no discretion to add Bitcoin exposure without a formal legal change.
The legal conclusion applies specifically to holding Bitcoin within municipal reserve funds. Earlier local discussions that touched on accepting Bitcoin for certain payments or exploring digital asset operations would be subject to separate policy, custody, and accounting controls, and none of those pathways overcome the Charter’s current investment restrictions on reserves. CryptoBriefing previously reported that the mayor’s office introduced the exploration to safeguard purchasing power and signal innovation.
Supporters have framed Bitcoin as a potential long-term hedge despite regulatory constraints. “This is a hill that I’m willing to die on,” said Mayor Ken Sim, as reported by Investing.com Canada, reflecting a political commitment that now runs up against statutory limits.
Implications, Comparisons, and Paths to Change for Municipal Finance
The immediate implication is clear: under the present provincial framework, Vancouver cannot add Bitcoin to municipal reserves, and similar restrictions apply to other B.C. local governments. According to Decrypt, the B.C. Ministry of Municipal Affairs has confirmed that existing legislation prohibits holding public reserves in cryptocurrency to avoid exposing taxpayer funds to undue risk.
The decision contrasts with growing interest in digital assets among some jurisdictions, highlighting how legal architecture, rather than market momentum, often determines feasibility for public treasuries. For Vancouver, institutional constraints, not technology readiness, are the binding factor.
Any path forward would require formal changes to the Vancouver Charter or relevant provincial statutes to expand the list of permissible reserve assets. If lawmakers were to consider such a shift, subsequent work would likely include setting risk limits, defining custody and internal controls, and establishing audit and valuation protocols suitable for a public-sector balance sheet.
At the time of this writing, Bitcoin (BTC) is trading near $70,611, providing market context but no bearing on the legal finding that governs Vancouver’s reserves.
| Disclaimer: The content on The CCPress is provided for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry inherent risks. Please consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. |


























