Five Crypto Firms Win Initial Approvals as Trust Banks, Including Ripple, Circle, BitGo
TL;DR
Five crypto firms including Ripple, Circle, BitGo, Fidelity Digital Assets, and Paxos received conditional OCC approval to become federally chartered banks. This marks a major regulatory shift allowing stablecoin issuers to operate under federal oversight, following Anchorage Digital's precedent.
Key Takeaways
- •Ripple, Circle, BitGo, Fidelity Digital Assets, and Paxos received conditional approval from the OCC to become federally chartered trust banks
- •This represents a significant regulatory shift for crypto banking in the U.S., bringing stablecoin issuers under federal oversight
- •The approvals follow Anchorage Digital's precedent as the first crypto firm to receive a federal bank charter
- •Ripple's CEO called this 'huge news' for the industry and criticized traditional banks' 'anti-competitive tactics'
- •The OCC has shifted from crypto-resistant to crypto-friendly under the Trump administration's appointee Jonathan Gould

What to know:
- Crypto firms Circle, Ripple, Fidelity Digital Assets, BitGo and Paxos received conditional approval by the OCC to become federally chartered trust banks.
- The move sets up firms to follow in the footsteps of Anchorage Digital, the first to get a federal bank trust charter in the U.S.
- A slew of stablecoin issuers and crypto firms, including Coinbase, filed for federal oversight after GENIUS Act was written into law.
- Crypto firms Circle, Ripple, Fidelity Digital Assets, BitGo and Paxos received conditional approval by the OCC to become federally chartered trust banks.
- The move sets up firms to follow in the footsteps of Anchorage Digital, the first to get a federal bank trust charter in the U.S.
- A slew of stablecoin issuers and crypto firms, including Coinbase, filed for federal oversight after GENIUS Act was written into law.
Five digital asset firms have received conditional approvals Friday to become federally chartered trust banks by the Office of the Comptroller of Currency (OCC) in a major step to bring U.S. dollar stablecoin issuers under federal regulatory oversight.
Blockchain firm Ripple and Circle's (CRCL) First National Digital Currency Bank are on the list, which also includes BitGo, Fidelity Digital Assets and Paxos, each having previously operated under state charters that will be converted to conditional federal status.
The OCC is the only federal agency that charters banks and trusts, and this surge in approvals potentially marks a major turning point in crypto banking. Since the arrival of President Donald Trump's administration, the regulator — run by his appointee, Jonathan Gould — has shifted from a crypto-resistant stance to a friendly approach.
"The OCC will continue to provide a path for both traditional and innovative approaches to financial services to ensure the federal banking system keeps pace with the evolution of finance and supports a modern economy," Gould said in a statement.
If the newly approved trust banks can meet agency expectations, they'll permanently join about 60 regulated institutions with such charters, which allow for fiduciary activities including custody. National trust banks — a category that includes the first chartered crypto bank, Anchorage Digital — have certain limits in their business activities, so they don't offer the same deposit and lending capabilities as the OCC's larger pool of national banks.
'Huge news' for crypto, Ripple's Garlinghouse says
Ripple chief executive officer Brad Garlinghouse said in an X post that the OCC's move is "huge news," a "massive step" for the firm's $1.3 billion RLUSD$0.9999 stablecoin. He also slammed the bank lobby for their "anti-competitive tactics."
"You’ve complained that crypto isn’t playing by the same rules, but here’s the crypto industry — directly under the OCC's supervision and standards — prioritizing compliance, trust and innovation to the benefit of consumers," Garlinghouse said. "What are you so afraid of?"
Circle, the issuer of the $78 billion stablecoin USDC$0.9999, said in a press release that the national trust bank charter would "enhance the safety and regulatory oversight of the USDC Reserve, while enabling Circle to offer fiduciary digital asset custody and related services to institutional customers."
Paxos, the company behind the $3.8 billion PYUSD$1.0002 and the consortium-backed, $1.4 billion Global Dollar token (USDG), said that its federally regulated platform would "allow businesses to issue, custody, trade and settle digital assets with clarity and confidence." Notably, Paxos has been operating under a New York Department of Financial Service (NYDFS) charter since 2015, and first applied for federal charter in 2020.
Mike Belshe, CEO of BitGo, said that the development "marks an official end to the war on crypto and the beginning of the next era of innovation in banking," adding that "we’ve entered the era of regulatory integration, and improvements will continue to happen fast." BitGo is the issuer behind USD1 (USD1), the digital dollar token of World Liberty Financial, a crypto project with close ties to the Trump family.
The crypto sector has long struggled with banking in the U.S., including a prolonged fight against regulators and large institutions that the industry accused of systemically debanking their companies and executives. The Trump administration has sought to reverse any policies and banking activity that adversely targeted crypto firms.
The OCC issued a report on Thursday about debanking, arguing that all nine of the largest banks were involved and that those guilty of severing banking ties to legal business customers could face punishment.
UPDATE (December 12, 2025, 16:59 UTC): Adds comments from two of the involved companies.
UPDATE (December 12, 2025, 17:06 UTC): Adds information on the OCC's debanking report.
UPDATE (December 12, 2025, 17:16 UTC): Adds comment from Ripple's CEO.
UPDATE (December 12, 2025, 17:37 UTC): Adds comment from BitGo's CEO.
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