Switzerland’s banking sector is moving closer to adopting a regulated form of digital money as the Swiss Bankers Association (SBA) advances efforts to develop a digital Swiss franc known as the deposit token. In September, PostFinance, Sygnum Bank, and UBS carried out a Proof of Concept that used deposit tokens to complete legally enforceable payments between banks on a public blockchain. This pilot has been interpreted as evidence that blockchain-based settlement can operate reliably alongside the country’s established financial infrastructure.
The pilot involved issuing the token on a public blockchain while settling transactions through Switzerland’s interbank clearing system. Observers believe the test demonstrates how the country may modernize its payment rails by introducing digital deposits that function on-chain while staying secured within the traditional banking environment. Industry analysts have also noted that the deposit token could support a new generation of business models, including asset tokenization, automated machine-to-machine payments, and blockchain-based escrow mechanisms.
Industry participants described the pilot as a preview of how banking could evolve. Calvin Taylor, Chief Financial Officer at D24 Fintech, stated that the deposit token had been presented as a milestone for global finance, showing how blockchain is encouraging banks to reassess long-standing assumptions about financial architecture. He noted that Switzerland, long viewed as a global financial hub, appeared to be signaling how traditional institutions might transition into the digital era.
Taylor also remarked that the financial sector had already seen the tokenization of commodities, carbon credits, real estate, and artwork, and suggested that applying similar methods to deposits and settlements was an expected next step. He emphasized that the deposit token was not merely a technical test but an example of how regulated institutions could issue digital money that combines the certainty of bank deposits with the efficiency, programmability, and round-the-clock functionality of blockchain systems.
According to Taylor, the study highlighted several advantages that blockchain can bring to financial services, including real-time settlement between institutions, reduced counterparty and liquidity risks, enhanced transparency, and the potential for automated payments triggered by smart contracts. He added that the rapid evolution of tokenized finance would require central banks and regulators to update frameworks for monetary policy, oversight, and insurance so they remain effective in a digital environment.
Taylor also suggested that Swiss banks participating in the pilot could soon introduce commercial services powered by the new deposit token structure. He indicated that updated regulatory guidance or new legislation might clarify how deposit tokens should be classified and managed within Switzerland’s legal framework.
He concluded by saying that the deposit token points to a turning point in global finance, describing the shift as a move away from static centralized systems toward a programmable, interoperable, and tokenized financial architecture. In his view, institutions that adapt early may play a central role in shaping next-generation digital money, while those that delay adoption risk being overtaken by rapid innovation in the financial sector.
