YC Makes the Case for Crypto as Default Infrastructure Prominent startup accelerator Y Combinator (@ycombinator) has come out in support of the CLARITY Act, saying it is excited about the leg
YC Makes the Case for Crypto as Default Infrastructure
Prominent startup accelerator Y Combinator (@ycombinator) has come out in support of the CLARITY Act, saying it is excited about the legislation and believes that all startups will eventually build on crypto technology. The accelerator argued that blockchains enable instant asset transfers, global access, and open financial infrastructure, and that clear regulations are a prerequisite for wider adoption across traditional finance.
The statement reflects a broader shift in Silicon Valley's posture toward crypto regulation. On its official blog, Y Combinator noted that regulatory uncertainty has long been the main obstacle to building what it calls "Fintech 3.0," and that emerging legislation could let founders build generational companies onchain with confidence. The accelerator has also launched a dedicated crypto program offering startups funding, gas fee subsidies, and infrastructure support from partners including the Solana Foundation and QuickNode.
Where the CLARITY Act Stands
The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, known as the CLARITY Act, is now one of Washington's most significant crypto bills in years. On May 14, 2026, the Senate Banking Committee advanced the bill by a vote of 15 to 9, with all 13 Republicans joined by two Democrats, though those Democrats indicated their committee votes did not guarantee support on the Senate floor without further progress on outstanding issues.
On June 1, 2026, a new version of the Senate Banking bill was published and the CLARITY Act was placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar, making it formally eligible for full Senate floor consideration. To become law, the bill must still be reconciled with the Senate Agriculture Committee's version, pass a 60-vote Senate floor vote, be reconciled with the House-passed version, and be signed by the President.
Passage of the bill is widely viewed as a potential inflection point for crypto markets because it would establish the first comprehensive US regulatory framework for digital assets, ending years of uncertainty over whether tokens fall under SEC or CFTC jurisdiction. The legislation would create clearer rules for exchanges, brokers, stablecoin issuers, and decentralized finance platforms, a move many analysts say is necessary before large institutional investors, banks, and asset managers can commit capital at scale.
The bill has been championed by numerous crypto companies, including Coinbase, Circle, and Ripple. Venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz is another key supporter. Y Combinator's public endorsement adds further weight from the startup world, signalling that demand for a functioning US regulatory framework now extends well beyond the crypto industry itself.
Sources:Y Combinator: Build Onchain (Official YC Blog)CNBC: Clarity Act clears Senate Banking CommitteeLatham and Watkins: US Crypto Policy Tracker