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SWIFT Moves to Blockchain Settlement With Live Trials

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Written by
Phil Haunhorst

30 March 2026 17:41 UTC
  • SWIFT is moving its blockchain shared ledger into MVP phase with real transactions planned for 2026.
  • The permissioned ledger uses Ethereum layer two tech to enable 24/7 tokenized cross border payments.
  • Over 30 major banks including JPMorgan and HSBC helped shape the ledger's design and governance.
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SWIFT, the messaging backbone connecting over 11,000 financial institutions across more than 200 countries, has confirmed that its blockchain-based shared ledger is progressing into its first MVP iteration.

After completing a design phase with a global group of banks, the network is now preparing for real-world transactions later this year.

What SWIFT’s Blockchain Ledger Actually Does

The shared ledger is not a public blockchain, and it does not use a native cryptocurrency. It is a permissioned infrastructure layer built on Linea, an Ethereum layer-2 network developed by ConsenSys.

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The ledger records, sequences, and validates transactions between financial institutions using smart contracts, enabling tokenized deposits, regulated stablecoins, and central bank digital currencies to move across institutions in real time, around the clock.

The Problem It Solves

Traditional cross-border payments depend on correspondent banking networks that operate within business hours, involve multiple intermediaries, and generate significant reconciliation overhead.

SWIFT’s ledger collapses that process by combining messaging and settlement into a single layer, giving banks faster payment execution, better liquidity visibility, and drastically reduced reconciliation effort.

The design phase brought together more than 30 global financial institutions, including JPMorgan, HSBC, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, and Bank of America.

Their input shaped the ledger’s functionality, governance model, and future development roadmap.

What Comes Next

The MVP is planned to go live with real transactions this year. SWIFT is positioning the ledger not as a replacement for its existing messaging infrastructure, but as a parallel track, one that enables institutions to access blockchain-based settlement without redesigning internal workflows or compliance processes.

For the $183 trillion annual cross-border payments market, the implications are significant.

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