---
title: "China Bans Crypto Promotion in New Marketing Rules"
date: 2026-04-24
author: "Kathleen Kinder"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/china-bans-crypto-advertising-in-new-regulations.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Compliance"
    url: "/compliance.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# China Bans Crypto Promotion in New Marketing Rules

China has introduced sweeping new rules that ban the online promotion of cryptocurrency, tightening its already strict stance on digital assets.

## Key Takeaways

- China formally classifies crypto trading and promotion as illegal financial activity under new marketing rules.
- New regulations target online platforms, influencers, and intermediaries involved in financial promotions.
- The rules will take effect on September 30, 2026, reinforcing earlier crypto bans.
- Global regulators are also increasing scrutiny on financial influencers and crypto advertising.

## What Happened?

China’s central bank, People’s Bank of China, along with seven other regulatory bodies, released new administrative measures to regulate online financial marketing. These rules explicitly ban the promotion of cryptocurrency trading and related activities.

The framework strengthens China’s long standing crackdown on crypto by extending enforcement to the digital marketing ecosystem, including social media platforms and content creators.

> 🇨🇳 NEW: China has tightened its crypto crackdown, issuing new online marketing rules that again classify crypto promotion, issuance and trading as illegal financial activities. [pic.twitter.com/qdaRqd0NuQ](https://t.co/qdaRqd0NuQ)
> 
> — Cointelegraph (@Cointelegraph) [April 24, 2026](https://twitter.com/Cointelegraph/status/2047636767612789213?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## China Expands Crypto Ban to Digital Marketing

The newly released rules mark a significant shift in enforcement strategy. While China has already [banned domestic crypto trading and mining](https://coinlaw.io/china-bans-overseas-crypto-issuance/), regulators are now targeting the **promotion layer** that helps such activities gain traction online.

Under the new framework:

- **Only licensed financial institutions can market financial products online.**
- **Third party platforms must be lawfully authorized to participate.**
- **Any promotion linked to virtual currency trading or issuance is classified as illegal.**
- **Assistance in promoting such services may be treated as participation in illegal financial activity.**

Authorities including the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, China Securities Regulatory Commission, and Cyberspace Administration of China are part of this coordinated push.

Officials say the move is designed to **protect consumers from misleading promotions**, especially those involving complex or high risk financial products.

## Focus on Influencers and Online Platforms

A key highlight of the rules is the direct focus on **[online marketing tactics](https://coinlaw.io/cryptocurrency-advertising-regulations-statistics/)** such as livestream promotions, algorithm driven recommendations, and viral campaigns.

Regulators warned that:

- **Platforms hosting such content could face legal consequences.**
- **Influencers promoting illegal financial products may be held personally accountable.**
- **Misleading advertising phrases like low risk or guaranteed returns are strictly prohibited.**

This reflects growing concern that social media has become a powerful channel for financial influence, especially among younger investors.

## Global Crackdown on Financial Influencers Gains Momentum

China’s move comes amid a broader global trend of tightening oversight on financial promotions.

In Europe, regulators supported by the European Securities and Markets Authority and Italy’s CONSOB have warned that social media investment promotions must comply with strict advertising rules.

In Australia, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission highlighted that younger investors increasingly rely on influencers and AI tools for trading decisions, with many holding crypto assets.

Meanwhile, the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority recently led a coordinated international effort targeting illegal financial influencers. The campaign resulted in:

- **Three criminal proceedings in the UK**.
- **Around 50 warning alerts issued.**
- **Over 120 takedown requests to social media platforms.**

## Market Reaction Remains Muted

Despite the regulatory tightening, crypto markets appear largely unaffected in the short term.

Prediction markets show that traders are **not pricing in immediate impact** from China’s announcement. [Bitcoin price expectations](https://coinlaw.io/bitcoin-statistics/) remain stable, with high confidence levels that prices will stay above key thresholds in the near term.

This suggests that investors may view China’s latest move as a continuation of existing policy rather than a new disruptive event.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

I see this as China closing one of the last open doors for crypto activity within its ecosystem. In my experience, when regulators shift focus from banning assets to controlling how information spreads, the impact can be deeper and longer lasting.

What stands out to me is the emphasis on **marketing and influence**. China is not just targeting crypto itself, but the narratives that drive adoption. I found that this approach could quietly reshape investor behavior over time, even beyond its borders.

At the same time, global coordination on finfluencers signals a bigger shift. This is no longer just about crypto regulation. It is about controlling how financial advice spreads in the digital age.