House Passes INVEST Act: A Major Step Toward Modernizing U.S. Capital Markets
- MyTimeEquityPE
- Dec 15
- 3 min read
The U.S. House of Representatives has passed the INVEST Act (Incentivizing New Ventures and Economic Strength Through Capital Formation Act of 2025), representing one of the most comprehensive capital-markets reform efforts in recent years. With strong bipartisan backing, the bill now advances to the Senate for consideration.
If enacted, the INVEST Act could materially reshape how capital is raised, who can invest in private markets, and how investor protections evolve in a modern, digital economy.
Why the INVEST Act Matters
U.S. capital markets have undergone a quiet but profound shift over the past two decades. More companies are staying private longer, a growing share of economic value is created outside public markets, and regulatory frameworks have not fully kept pace.
The INVEST Act seeks to address these structural changes by:
Expanding access to private investments responsibly
Lowering friction for startups and small businesses raising capital
Modernizing securities laws written for a pre-digital era
Strengthening investor protections alongside broader access
At its core, the Act is about capital formation, inclusion, and modernization.
Key Provisions of the INVEST Act
1. Expanding the Accredited Investor Definition
One of the most transformative elements of the INVEST Act is its reform of the accredited investor framework.
Historically, accreditation has been determined almost entirely by income or net worth. The INVEST Act introduces alternative pathways based on financial knowledge and experience, including:
Eligibility through professional credentials, licenses, or relevant industry experience
A standardized SEC-approved investor competency examination
This approach recognizes that financial sophistication is not synonymous with wealth and opens the door for more informed professionals to participate in private markets.
2. Improving Capital Formation for Startups and Small Businesses
The INVEST Act includes several provisions aimed at reducing regulatory burdens and improving fundraising efficiency for early-stage and growth companies:
Enhancements to Regulation A and private offering exemptions
Streamlined disclosure requirements for smaller issuers
Expanded support for emerging growth companies and rural businesses
These measures are designed to help businesses raise capital without incurring the disproportionate costs typically associated with public offerings.
3. Modernizing Retirement Plan Investment Options
The Act brings long-overdue updates to 403(b) retirement plans, which are commonly used by educators, nonprofit employees, and religious institutions.
Key changes include:
Allowing 403(b) plans to invest in collective investment trusts (CITs)
Enabling access to institutional-quality, lower-cost investment vehicles
Aligning 403(b) plan flexibility with 401(k) standards
This modernization has the potential to significantly improve long-term retirement outcomes for millions of participants.
4. Enhancing Investor Protections and Oversight
Importantly, the INVEST Act does not expand access at the expense of investor safety. It includes multiple safeguards, such as:
Creation of an SEC senior investor task force to study fraud, exploitation, and financial abuse
Enhanced reporting and oversight mechanisms for private offerings
Continued emphasis on suitability, disclosures, and transparency
This reflects a balanced policy approach that pairs broader participation with stronger guardrails.
5. Digital Modernization of Securities Regulation
Recognizing the realities of today’s markets, the INVEST Act supports:
Expanded use of electronic and digital disclosures
Modernized communication methods between issuers, investors, and regulators
Reduced reliance on paper-based compliance systems
These changes aim to lower administrative costs while improving efficiency and accessibility.
6. Expanding Access Beyond Major Metro Areas
The Act also addresses geographic inequities in capital access by:
Directing the SEC’s small-business advocate to focus on rural and underserved regions
Encouraging capital formation outside traditional financial hubs
This provision supports broader economic participation and regional growth across the U.S.
What This Means for Investors and Advisors
If enacted, the INVEST Act could:
Expand participation in private equity, private credit, venture capital, and alternative assets
Increase deal flow for private issuers
Encourage innovation in fund structures and investor education
Create a more inclusive but regulated private-markets ecosystem
For wealth advisors, family offices, and alternative investment sponsors, this legislation represents a meaningful evolution in how private capital markets function.
What’s Next
The INVEST Act now moves to the U.S. Senate, where it may be debated, amended, or incorporated into broader financial-services legislation. If approved and signed into law, it would mark one of the most consequential updates to U.S. capital-markets regulation in over a decade.
Final Perspective
The INVEST Act reflects a broader shift in policy thinking: capital markets must evolve to match today’s economy. By modernizing rules, expanding access based on knowledge rather than wealth alone, and reinforcing investor protections, the Act seeks to strengthen both opportunity and trust in the financial system.





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