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A rumor spreading in crypto communities on February 27, 2026, claiming X (formerly Twitter) has newly banned cryptocurrency promotions from its Paid Partnership Policy is inaccurate.
The policy has listed “financial products, services, or opportunities (including loans, investment services, crypto, buy now pay later services and other financial-related content)” as ineligible in country-specific sections such as Australia, European Union, United Kingdom since at least June 27, 2024, according to web archive of Wayback Machine.
The so-called “latest Paid Partnership Policy released by X, which lists the cryptocurrency industry (Crypto) as a prohibited industry for promotion,” circulating in the community today is false information.
According to the web-archive site archive, Crypto has been an “industry… pic.twitter.com/b8MRVnvws9
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) March 1, 2026
Globally, the ineligible industries list does not explicitly prohibit crypto, allowing organic posts but restricting sponsored content in those regions under local advertising laws.
The recent update to X’s Paid Partnership Policy includes three main changes:
These adjustments aim to improve transparency and enforcement for sponsored posts, with account-level consequences for undisclosed commercial intent.
X’s Head of Product Nikita Bier clarified that an initial display error in the policy page led to confusion, but cryptocurrency is no longer listed under Global Prohibited Industries, though regional bans remain.
Today we're announcing Paid Partnership labels on posts. X's core value is providing on authentic pulse on humanity.
While we want to encourage people to build their businesses on X, undisclosed promotions hurt the integrity of the product and lead people to distrust the content… pic.twitter.com/CmrRDx5tU1
— Nikita Bier (@nikitabier) March 1, 2026
Creators can still post about crypto organically, but compensated promotions in restricted jurisdictions require compliance with local regulators like the UK’s Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) or EU financial advertising laws.
The rumor is an example of how platform policy misreads can spread rapidly in crypto communities. Thankfully, X’s rules remain consistent with only minor adjustments to disclosure/enforcement in line with X’s shift toward regulated monetization amid increasing TradFi interest.
Short-term, it limits KOL-sponsored crypto campaigns in key markets while exceptions clause could open doors for compliant partnerships in the long term.
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