Circle has received final approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to establish a national trust bank, a milestone that grants the stablecoin issuer a federally supervised
Circle has received final approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to establish a national trust bank, a milestone that grants the stablecoin issuer a federally supervised institutional framework but stops short of allowing it to accept ordinary deposits or make loans.
What Circle can do under a US trust bank structure
The company announced that the OCC approved the creation of First National Digital Currency Bank, N.A., which will operate under the name Circle National Trust. Circle filed its application on June 30, 2025 and received conditional approval in December 2025 before securing final sign-off. For related coverage, see Trump Family Trust Bought Coinbase, Crypto Stocks in Q1: Ethics Filing.
A national trust bank is a limited-purpose institution supervised by a federal regulator, not a full-service commercial bank. It can hold and manage assets in a fiduciary capacity but does not carry the broad powers associated with traditional retail banking.
Upon opening, Circle National Trust will provide fiduciary digital asset custody services for Circle and its affiliates. Management of the USDC reserve is planned as a future capability rather than a launch activity, meaning the bank's initial scope is narrower than what some observers may expect.
CEO Jeremy Allaire framed the approval as a governance upgrade, stating: "Federal oversight of our trust bank sets a new standard for transparency, governance, and scale."
The approval follows a broader pattern of crypto firms pursuing federal bank charters. Coinbase's own OCC trust approval earlier signaled a shift in how regulators view digital asset custody, and Circle's earlier conditional license set the stage for this final step.
Why Circle still cannot take ordinary deposits or make loans
The OCC's own Charters manual specifies that a trust bank does not make commercial loans or accept demand deposits or deposits withdrawable by check or similar means. These restrictions are structural, not temporary, and define the charter category itself.
This means Circle National Trust cannot function like a traditional bank that takes customer cash, lends it out, and earns a spread. The charter permits holding customer assets in trust but not building a lending book or offering checking accounts.
For Circle's business model, the distinction matters. USDC, the company's dollar-pegged stablecoin, currently trades at $0.9999 with a market capitalization of roughly $73.31 billion. The trust bank structure gives Circle a federal supervisory home for custody operations without exposing it to the capital requirements and risk frameworks that come with deposit-taking and lending.
USDC Market Cap $73.31B CoinGecko lists USDC at roughly $73.31 billion in market capitalization, adding scale context to Circle's new trust-bank approval. Source: CoinGecko
USDC recorded approximately $9.66 billion in 24-hour trading volume, underscoring the scale of the token's market activity and the operational footprint that Circle's new trust entity will eventually support.
USDC 24h Trading Volume $9.66B CoinGecko shows about $9.66 billion in USDC trading volume over 24 hours, reinforcing the token's active market footprint. Source: CoinGecko
What this means for crypto users, partners, and regulation
The trust bank charter strengthens Circle's regulatory credibility with institutional partners who require counterparties to operate under federal supervision. For stablecoin observers, the approval adds a layer of governance without changing how USDC functions day to day.
The no-lending, no-deposit limitation also narrows risk. Unlike full-service banks, Circle National Trust will not face the kind of asset-liability mismatches that have historically stressed banking institutions. This may appeal to partners like Coinbase, which has backed Circle's stablecoin infrastructure across multiple initiatives.
The approval arrives during a period of broader caution in crypto markets, with the Fear & Greed Index sitting at 26, in "Fear" territory. Still, federal charter activity from firms like Circle and recent regulatory milestones suggest that institutional crypto infrastructure continues to advance regardless of short-term sentiment.
Circle National Trust will begin with internal custody services. Whether the OCC eventually broadens the bank's permitted activities, particularly around USDC reserve management, will depend on future regulatory proceedings.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
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