Circle secures final OCC approval for national trust bank to strengthen USDC infrastructure
Circle has secured final OCC approval to establish Circle National Trust, expanding regulated digital asset custody services.
Circle has received final approval from the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency [OCC] to establish a national trust bank. This marks a major regulatory milestone as the stablecoin issuer moves another key part of its USDC infrastructure under direct federal oversight.
The approval makes Circle one of the first crypto-native firms from the OCC’s latest wave of digital asset trust bank applicants to reach the operational stage. It also signals a broader shift as U.S. regulators increasingly integrate crypto infrastructure into the existing banking framework rather than creating a separate regime for digital assets.
Circle National Trust to provide federally regulated custody
The new institution, First National Digital Currency Bank, N.A., will operate as Circle National Trust under OCC supervision. According to Circle, the national trust bank will initially provide fiduciary digital asset custody services for the company and its affiliates.
It does this while creating a pathway to offer custody services directly to a limited number of institutional clients. This includes banks and regulated financial institutions, depending on market demand.
Circle also said the charter is designed to support future management of the USDC Reserve. Thus, bringing reserve operations under federal banking oversight if implemented.
The company described the approval as strengthening USDC’s infrastructure through federally regulated custody. It also lays the foundation for additional capabilities as the platform evolves.
Chief Executive Jeremy Allaire said the approval represents “a defining step” in bringing blockchain infrastructure into the U.S. financial system. He added that federal oversight would provide greater transparency, governance, and confidence for institutions building on public blockchains.
Approval advances latest wave of crypto trust banks
The announcement also places Circle at the forefront of the OCC’s latest push to bring crypto firms into the federal banking system.
In December 2025, the OCC granted conditional approval to a group of crypto-focused national trust bank applicants, including Circle, Ripple, BitGo, Fidelity Digital Assets, and Paxos.
Circle has now progressed from conditional to final approval, allowing it to establish and operate its national trust bank under the regulator’s supervision.
The milestone reflects a broader trend in U.S. digital asset regulation, with crypto infrastructure providers increasingly seeking national trust bank charters to expand regulated custody services and strengthen institutional participation in digital assets.
What a national trust bank means
Unlike a traditional commercial bank, a national trust bank does not operate as a retail lender or accept consumer deposits in the conventional sense. Instead, it specializes in fiduciary services, asset custody, and trust activities under OCC oversight.
For Circle, that structure enables the company to provide regulated digital asset custody while positioning USDC infrastructure within an established federal banking framework.
The approval also establishes a pathway for future reserve management under OCC supervision, reinforcing Circle’s strategy to expand regulated infrastructure around its stablecoin ecosystem.
Final Summary
- Circle has received final OCC approval to establish Circle National Trust, moving key parts of its USDC infrastructure under direct federal banking oversight.
- The approval advances Circle beyond the OCC’s earlier conditional approval stage.