Sberbank Plans Crypto Wallet As Russia Sets September Digital-Asset Law
Sberbank plans to add a crypto wallet and digital depository to Sberbank Online and SberInvestments by December if Russia’s digital-asset bill takes effect as expected on Sept. 1. The plan follows years of central-bank resistance and leaves fees, eligible tokens and launch conditions undisclosed.

Sberbank Plans Crypto Wallet After September Law
Sberbank plans to add a crypto wallet and digital depository to Sberbank Online and SberInvestments by December, making Russia’s largest bank a test case for a regulated digital-asset market that was previously resisted by the central bank.
The launch depends on Russia’s bill “On Digital Currency and Digital Rights.” Bank of Russia First Deputy Chairman Vladimir Chistyukhin said the law is expected to take effect Sept.
1, while Sberbank first deputy chairman Kirill Tsarev said the bank would prepare the wallet as regulations emerge.
Tsarev said the service would be implemented first in Sberbank Online and SberInvestments.
The planned digital depository would store and account for authorised cryptocurrencies inside the bank’s own apps, rather than treating crypto access as a separate exchange-only product.
Digital-Asset Licences Cover Custody And Cross-Border Settlement
The planned law creates licences for crypto trading, custody, digital-to-fiat exchange and cross-border settlement activity.
Sberbank is not only describing a retail wallet; it is also preparing custody infrastructure for a market that Moscow is moving into an official registry.
The legislation also sets limits for non-qualified investors.
RBC reported that the rules would allow those investors to trade under testing requirements and annual limits capped at roughly 300,000 rubles, or around $3,800, while market participants would have until July 1, 2027, to enter the official registry.
Sberbank’s role gives the policy shift a banking-system channel.
The bank’s own platforms already sit inside a large retail and investment customer base, so a wallet inside those apps would place authorised crypto access in a supervised bank environment if the law takes effect as planned.
Bank Of Russia Shift Follows Earlier Ban Push
The Bank of Russia opposed broad crypto use for years.
The central bank’s January 2022 position was to bar trading, mining and everyday use because officials cited financial-stability and monetary-policy risks.
Russia’s Finance Ministry pushed for regulation instead, keeping crypto payments prohibited while creating a route for licensed trading.
CoinDesk reported that CoinDesk reported that President Vladimir Putin signed a 2022 law that reinforced the domestic payment ban for cryptocurrencies after the invasion of Ukraine began.
Sanctions later made foreign-trade settlement the carve-out.
CoinDesk reported that in 2024, Russia allowed crypto mining and created an experimental cross-border payments regime in which the central bank can approve selected firms for foreign trade transactions.
MOEX, VTB And T-Bank Move Around The Same Law
The Moscow Exchange has also moved into cryptocurrency-linked products through cash-settled futures contracts tied to various coins.
That keeps exposure inside regulated market infrastructure rather than requiring direct coin settlement for the futures product.
Sberbank is not the only large institution preparing for the new framework.
VTB and T-Bank are also working on digital depositories after the law takes effect, according to the extracted report text.
The institutional activity shows how Russia’s crypto policy is narrowing from a broad payment ban towards licensed custody, trading access and cross-border settlement channels.
It does not remove the domestic prohibition on using cryptocurrencies for goods and services.
Launch Details And Token Lists Remain Undisclosed
Tsarev said Sberbank Online and SberInvestments would be the first planned channels for the wallet and depository route.
Sberbank did not disclose wallet fees, eligible tokens, customer onboarding rules, custody insurance, foreign-trade settlement partners or a final launch date beyond the December target.


















