The U.S. Treasury Department just fired its first regulatory shot at one of decentralized finance’s most controversial practices. On March 25, the agency proposed a new framework specifically designed to combat sandwich attacks and front-running on decentralized exchanges, marking the first time a federal body has moved to regulate maximal extractable value (MEV) extraction in DeFi markets.
What Happened
The Treasury’s proposed rule introduces a classification system for MEV-related activity on public blockchains, distinguishing between passive arbitrage and predatory sandwich attacks that harm retail traders. Under the framework, protocols and validators that facilitate or profit from front-running user transactions could face reporting requirements similar to those imposed on traditional market makers.
The proposal also outlines potential penalties for entities that systematically extract value from pending transactions without disclosure. Treasury officials described the move as closing a regulatory gap that has allowed billions of dollars in value to be siphoned from ordinary DeFi users since 2020.
Notably, the rule would apply to any U.S.-based validators, relayers, or block builders who participate in MEV extraction chains, regardless of whether the underlying protocol is incorporated domestically.
What It Means for Traders
For DeFi traders, this proposal could reshape how they interact with decentralized exchanges. Sandwich attacks have long been a hidden tax on swap transactions, with bots detecting pending trades and placing orders before and after them to extract profit at the user’s expense.
If enacted, the rule could push DEX protocols to adopt built-in MEV protection mechanisms or risk being classified as facilitators of predatory trading. Traders on platforms like Uniswap, SushiSwap, and other automated market makers may see improved execution prices as a result.
However, the proposal also raises questions about enforcement feasibility. DeFi protocols operate across jurisdictions, and MEV extraction often involves actors outside U.S. regulatory reach. Traders should watch for industry pushback and potential modifications during the comment period.
The Bigger Picture
This move signals that U.S. regulators are no longer content to address crypto through enforcement actions alone. By proposing specific rules for DeFi market structure, the Treasury is acknowledging that decentralized finance has matured to the point where targeted regulation is both necessary and feasible.
The proposal arrives amid a broader regulatory thaw in Washington, with the FDIC and SEC both issuing crypto-friendly guidance in the same week. Together, these moves suggest a coordinated shift toward building a formal regulatory framework for digital assets rather than relying on case-by-case enforcement.
For the DeFi sector, the challenge will be balancing compliance with the permissionless ethos that defines decentralized finance. Protocols that adapt early could gain a competitive advantage as institutional capital seeks compliant DeFi venues.
The Treasury’s sandwich attack proposal marks a watershed moment for DeFi regulation in the United States. Traders should monitor the comment period closely, as the final rule could fundamentally alter MEV dynamics and reshape how value flows through decentralized markets.


















