Swift has launched a blockchain-based shared ledger designed to support round-the-clock tokenized payments across regulated financial institutions, marking one of the most significant efforts by the traditional banking industry to integrate blockchain technology into global payments. The Belgium-based financial messaging network introduced the platform with an initial group of 16 major banks, including Citi, HSBC, UBS, BNP Paribas, BNY, Standard Chartered, MUFG, ANZ, DBS, and Lloyds.
The new system is intended to allow tokenized funds to move continuously, including weekends and holidays, while maintaining the compliance standards and operational oversight required by financial regulators. By enabling banks’ internal tokenized payment systems to work seamlessly with one another, Swift aims to address a key obstacle that has slowed the wider adoption of blockchain-based financial infrastructure.
The launch represents Swift’s first live implementation of its shared blockchain ledger and is designed to enable 24/7 tokenized payments while improving interoperability between participating banks’ digital payment systems.
Swift indicated that participation from leading global financial institutions reflected strong international demand for a shared platform capable of connecting multiple tokenized payment networks. The organization suggested that interoperability would become increasingly important as financial institutions continue developing their own digital asset and tokenized deposit solutions.
The shared ledger is based on an Ethereum Virtual Machine-compatible architecture built with Hyperledger Besu. Rather than replacing existing banking infrastructure, the platform introduces a shared orchestration layer that validates payment commitments between participating institutions. This approach allows blockchain technology to be integrated into regulated banking operations without compromising compliance, governance, or operational controls.
The initiative also signals growing momentum among banks to prepare for a financial system in which deposits, securities, and payments become increasingly tokenized while remaining within established regulatory frameworks. Tokenization enables digital representations of traditional financial assets and funds, allowing them to incorporate programmable features that can automate certain financial processes and improve transaction efficiency.
Swift’s blockchain infrastructure is expected to support future innovations such as programmable money and agentic commerce, allowing automated systems to execute payments and financial transactions on behalf of users.
The rollout comes as established financial institutions face increasing competition from the rapidly expanding stablecoin sector. Stablecoins, led by issuers Tether and Circle, have gained widespread adoption by enabling users to transfer digital funds directly on blockchain networks without relying on traditional banking intermediaries. Industry estimates place the stablecoin market at approximately $315 billion, underscoring its growing influence in global payments.
Implemented in 9 months. Global from day one.
Swift's blockchain-based ledger is ready for use, with ANZ, BNP Paribas, BNY, Citi, DBS, First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB), FirstRand Bank, HSBC, Itaú Unibanco, Lloyds Bank, Mashreq, MUFG Bank, OCBC, Standard Bank, Standard Chartered, UOB… pic.twitter.com/05nk0AND8t
— Swift (@swiftcommunity) July 9, 2026
By introducing its own blockchain-enabled infrastructure, Swift is positioning regulated banking networks as a competitive alternative to stablecoin-based payment systems. Unlike many public blockchain payment solutions, Swift’s platform is designed to preserve the regulatory safeguards, compliance procedures, and institutional governance standards expected within the global banking industry.
Swift continues to play a central role in international finance by facilitating cross-border payment messaging for more than 11,500 banks and financial institutions across over 200 countries and territories. The organization estimates that its network supports transactions equivalent to the value of global gross domestic product every two to three days, highlighting its importance within the international financial system.
With support from 16 major global banks, Swift’s blockchain initiative reflects the banking industry’s accelerating effort to modernize cross-border payments while preserving regulatory oversight and operational resilience.
The introduction of the shared ledger demonstrates how established financial institutions are increasingly embracing blockchain technology to improve payment efficiency without abandoning the controls that underpin the global banking system. As tokenization continues to expand across financial markets, Swift‘s latest initiative could serve as a foundation for broader adoption of regulated digital payments and programmable financial services in the years ahead.







