Marcus Webb Fintech Engineer · Crypto Researcher since 2017

Marcus spent nearly a decade building payment infrastructure at fintech companies. He writes plain-English explainers focused on accuracy and honest risk disclosure.

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Key Takeaways

  • The OCC approved federal trust bank charters for Circle, Ripple, BitGo, Paxos, and Fidelity Digital Assets in December 2025
  • National banks can now hold crypto, issue stablecoins, and offer custody without prior regulatory approval
  • 11 crypto firms applied for federal bank charters in just 83 days in early 2026
  • This is the biggest shift in US banking since the internet era

What Changed in 2025–2026?

For years, US banks were quietly discouraged from touching cryptocurrency. That changed dramatically in 2025. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) — the federal agency that regulates national banks — issued a series of letters clarifying that banks can now:

  • Hold crypto assets in custody for customers
  • Buy and sell crypto on customers' behalf
  • Issue stablecoins
  • Run blockchain verification nodes
  • Hold crypto on their own balance sheet

No prior permission required. The OCC simply said: treat crypto like any other banking activity, with standard risk controls.

Who Got Federal Bank Charters?

In December 2025, the OCC conditionally approved federal trust bank charters for five crypto firms in a single announcement:

  • Circle — issuer of USDC stablecoin
  • Ripple — blockchain payments company
  • BitGo — institutional crypto custodian
  • Paxos — stablecoin and tokenization firm
  • Fidelity Digital Assets — Fidelity's crypto arm

Then the floodgates opened. By March 2026, 11 companies had applied in 83 days — including Stripe's stablecoin subsidiary Bridge, Crypto.com, and Morgan Stanley. Coinbase and World Liberty Financial have pending applications.

What Is a National Trust Bank?

A national trust bank isn't a regular commercial bank. It can't take insured deposits or make loans. What it can do is hold and manage assets on behalf of clients — which is exactly what crypto custody requires.

Think of it like a vault service. A national trust bank can hold your Bitcoin safely, manage your stablecoin reserves, and handle transactions — all under direct federal oversight.

The key benefit: national trust banks are governed by federal law, which preempts a patchwork of state-by-state money transmitter licenses. One federal charter instead of 50 state licenses.

Why This Matters for Everyday Americans

Here's the practical impact:

  • Your bank may soon offer crypto: With federal authorization, traditional banks can build crypto products without legal risk
  • Better consumer protection: Federally chartered institutions face stricter oversight than unregulated exchanges
  • Stablecoins become mainstream: When Circle and Paxos operate as regulated banks, their stablecoins become more trustworthy payment tools
  • Institutional money flows in: Pension funds and asset managers require federally regulated custodians — now they have them

What Are the Risks?

Not everyone is happy about this shift. The Conference of State Banking Supervisors called the OCC's approach a 'Franken-charter' — an untested combination of regulatory authorities that might not survive a legal challenge. Traditional banks are also concerned about competition from crypto firms that can now offer deposit-like products without full banking regulations.

For consumers, the main risk is that 'conditional approval' is not final approval. These charters can still be revoked or modified. And the new framework hasn't been tested through a market crisis yet.

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency assets carry risk. Always do your own research before making financial decisions.