---
title: "Swift’s Blockchain Ledger Goes Live With 17 Banks"
date: 2026-07-09
author: "Kelvin Scott"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/swift-s-blockchain-ledger-goes-live-with-17-banks.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Payments"
    url: "/payments.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# Swift’s Blockchain Ledger Goes Live With 17 Banks

Swift confirmed on July 9, 2026, that its blockchain-based shared ledger is ready for initial use, with 17 banks across six continents preparing to pilot live tokenised-deposit transactions for round-the-clock cross-border payments.

## Key Takeaways

- Swift said its blockchain-based shared ledger is ready for initial use, marking the first live use case for infrastructure the cooperative designed and built in just nine months after announcing the project last year, per Swift.
- Seventeen banks from six continents are preparing to pilot live transactions, including HSBC, Citi, UBS, BNY, ANZ and Wells Fargo, according to Swift.
- Swift’s shared ledger gives banks a secure orchestration layer for bank-issued tokenised deposits on their own ledgers, letting them move funds for customers overnight and on weekends before completing final settlement through existing systems.
- Swift’s existing network already moves the equivalent of world GDP every two to three days between more than 200 markets, the backbone the new ledger extends into tokenised settlement.
- 75% of payments on Swift’s network already reach beneficiary banks within 10 minutes, and often in seconds, a speed baseline the ledger is designed to extend into weekend and after-hours settlement windows.

## Swift Activates Blockchain Ledger With 17 Pilot Banks

Swift announced from Brussels that its blockchain-based ledger is ready for initial use, enabling early adopter financial institutions to support 24/7 cross-border payments with tokenised deposits. It’s the first use case for the ledger, which Swift announced last year and designed and built with feedback from international financial institutions in just nine months.

The rollout follows strong global demand for the new addition to Swift’s technology stack and its ability to unlock faster, flexible money movement across the world. Swift said the ledger will expand in functionality and availability after the initial controlled go-live phase.

> 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](https://t.co/05nk0AND8t)
> 
> — Swift (@swiftcommunity) [July 9, 2026](https://x.com/swiftcommunity/status/2075145807188152541?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## How the Shared Ledger Moves Tokenised Deposits?

The mechanism spans all 17 pilot banks, but it is narrower than “**banks on blockchain**” headlines suggest: Swift’s ledger works as a secure orchestration layer for bank-issued tokenised deposits on their own ledgers, not a new asset banks hold outright. Funds move on that layer for customer transactions, including overnight and on weekends, then settle through the same rails banks already use.

Swift was explicit that the design trades no compliance ground for speed: banks benefit from improved client experience and global liquidity efficiency without compromising compliance, credit, risk and control standards embedded in existing payment processing. **Thierry Chilosi**, Chief Business Officer at Swift, said:

“

We’re extending the trust and stability of established finance into the frontiers of digital money.

Thierry ChilosiChief Business Officer – Swift





## Which Banks Are Piloting the Ledger?

Named participants span regions and bank sizes: ANZ, BNP Paribas, BNY, Citi, DBS, First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB), FirstRand Bank Limited, [HSBC](https://coinlaw.io/hsbc-statistics/), Itaú Unibanco, Lloyds Bank, Mashreq, MUFG Bank, OCBC, Standard Chartered, [UBS](https://coinlaw.io/ubs-statistics/), UOB and [Wells Fargo](https://coinlaw.io/wells-fargo-statistics/).

**Manish Kohli**, HSBC’s Head of Global Payments Solutions, said the bank is connecting its Tokenised Deposit Service to Swift’s new blockchain-based ledger infrastructure, building on its existing 24/7, compliant tokenised deposits capabilities.

**Andreas Kubli**, UBS’s Group Head of Digital Assets, called interoperability the key enabler for scaling tokenised deposits beyond individual institutions. **Debopama Sen**, Citi’s Head of Payments, Services, said the launch represents an important step towards enabling always-on payments and liquidity.

## Implications for Regulated Digital Assets

The distinction between Swift’s ledger and public stablecoin rails is the compliance wrapper, not the technology. Where stablecoin settlement runs on public chains with issuer-level backing, Swift’s ledger keeps tokenised value inside bank-issued deposits moving over infrastructure banks already use for credit, risk and control checks, which is precisely the design compromise regulators have pushed for since institutional tokenisation pilots began. That distinction matters for how quickly systemically important banks are willing to move from pilot talk into live transactions.

The bigger signal is what problem the ledger actually solves. Swift’s rails already deliver on speed, so the gap the ledger closes is availability, not velocity, since tokenised deposits let banks move customer funds overnight and on weekends before completing final settlement through existing systems.

That reframes the story: banks are not racing crypto rails on speed, they are closing the weekend and after-hours gap that has persisted in [cross-border payments](https://coinlaw.io/cross-border-payments-industry-statistics/) even as domestic instant-payment systems matured. Swift also tied the ledger to a foundation for future innovation in areas like programmable money and agentic commerce, though it gave no specific timeline for either.

With 17 pilot banks now committed to live transactions rather than proofs of concept, the ledger’s expansion pace after this initial controlled go-live phase is the clearest near-term marker of whether tokenised deposits become the default institutional bridge to blockchain-based settlement.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

This 2026 launch reads as regulated finance, led by Swift, choosing its own on-ramp to blockchain rails rather than one built for public crypto markets. Bank-issued tokenised deposits, moved over a Swift-built orchestration layer and settled through existing systems, let **17** pilot banks test blockchain-based settlement without stepping outside the compliance, credit and risk controls their regulators already expect.

The more interesting tension sits between this ledger and the network Swift already runs. A messaging system that already delivers near-instant settlement most of the time did not need a blockchain layer to be fast; it needed one that works overnight, on weekends, and ahead of final settlement.

Whether the go-live phase expands quickly across Swift’s existing footprint, or stalls at the 17-bank cohort, will say more about institutional appetite for tokenised settlement than the launch announcement itself.

Definition of Cross-Chain. Link to full glossary entry follows the description.**Cross-Chain**Cross-chain is the ability to move data or assets between separate blockchains via bridges, messaging protocols, or interoperability networks.

[Read more](https://coinlaw.io/glossary/cross-chain/)