Skip to main content

Glossary

Qualified Custodian

A financial institution meeting specific regulatory requirements to hold client assets, providing legal protections and oversight. The designation indicates minimum standards and external accountability, but does not eliminate custody risk. Security architecture, reserve practices, and withdrawal policies matter independently.

Why it matters

Qualified custodian status signals regulatory oversight and legal accountability. For institutions required to use qualified custodians, it may be mandatory. But the designation alone does not guarantee security: qualified custodians have failed, and unqualified providers sometimes offer superior technical security.


How it works

Regulatory frameworks (varying by jurisdiction) define requirements for qualified custodian status: capital requirements, segregation rules, audit obligations, and insurance minimums. Custodians meeting these requirements can serve regulated clients like investment advisers. Regular examinations verify ongoing compliance.


Example

An investment adviser managing client portfolios must use a qualified custodian for digital assets under SEC rules. They select a state-chartered trust company with qualified custodian status. This satisfies regulatory requirements, but the adviser still performs due diligence on the custodian's actual security practices.


Related terms


Further reading

Bitcoin custody built for conviction

Ficha provides full-reserve bitcoin custody for serious long-term holders. Clear terms, reliable withdrawals, and standards designed for decades.