Coinbase has taken its most significant step yet toward becoming a pillar of the regulated U.S. financial system. On April 2, 2026, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency granted Coinbase conditional approval to charter Coinbase National Trust Company as a federally regulated national trust bank. The move ends years of operating under a patchwork of state-level licences and places America’s largest crypto exchange under a single federal regulator for the first time. For the broader crypto industry, it signals that the wall between digital assets and traditional finance is not just crumbling. It is being replaced with a formal regulatory framework built to last.
What the OCC Charter Actually Is
It is important to be clear about what this approval does and does not mean. Coinbase clarified that it does not plan to become a traditional bank. It will not take customer deposits or lend money through fractional reserve systems. Instead, the charter provides federal oversight for its custody services, which involve holding and safeguarding digital assets on behalf of institutional clients.
By obtaining a federal charter, Coinbase can eventually operate across all 50 states under a single set of rules, bypassing the patchwork of individual state money transmitter licences it currently holds. The path to this approval was paved by a series of OCC Interpretive Letters issued between 2020 and 2021, which affirmed that national banks and trust companies have the authority to provide digital asset custody. In practical terms, it means hedge funds, asset managers, and pension funds that require federal-level oversight to meet their internal compliance mandates now have a cleaner path to using Coinbase as their custodian of record.
Why This Is a Big Deal for Institutional Crypto
Coinbase’s institutional custody business was already one of the most dominant in the world before this approval. The company’s existing institutional business manages $245.7 billion in assets and serves as custodian for eight of the 11 spot Bitcoin ETF mandates approved by the SEC, representing approximately 80% of all U.S. digital asset ETF custody.
This move is specifically designed to attract a broader addressable market of hedge funds, asset managers, and institutional investors who require federal-level oversight to meet their internal compliance mandates. The national trust charter differs fundamentally from a full-service commercial bank charter, but it formalises Coinbase’s dominant custody position under a single regulator and removes the state-by-state friction that institutional allocators have cited as a barrier to deeper crypto engagement.
Greg Tusar, co-CEO of Coinbase Institutional, captured the significance plainly: “This charter is about bringing federal regulatory uniformity to the custody and market infrastructure business we have been building for years. The OCC charter was designed precisely for this purpose, to provide clear oversight over assets in safekeeping, and that is exactly how we intend to use it.”
The Payments Angle
Beyond custody, Coinbase’s chief legal officer Paul Grewal signalled that the charter opens a new front entirely. Grewal stated that over the long haul, Coinbase will be able to explore, with the OCC, offering not just custody products but also other infrastructure products, particularly around payments, that the company believes will expand and extend crypto payments in important new directions. That payments ambition is significant. A federally chartered trust company operating crypto payment rails across all 50 states would represent a structural shift in how digital dollars move through the U.S. financial system.
Coinbase Is Not Alone
What the OCC approval does is reinforce a broader pattern already underway. Circle, Ripple, BitGo, Paxos, Fidelity Digital Assets, Bridge, Crypto.com, Protego, Morgan Stanley, Payoneer, and Zerohash all filed or received conditional approvals in an 83-day window ending March 5, 2026. Coinbase’s conditional approval extends that wave. The industry is building federal banking infrastructure simultaneously and at pace, regardless of whether the CLARITY Act passes in its current form.
Nick Puckrin, co-founder of Coin Bureau, described the approval as “yet another sign” that the crypto system and the traditional financial system are converging. “For Coinbase, this opens the doors to institutional money, which is where most of the interest in digital assets is coming from in the current market,” he said.
The Criticism
Not everyone is welcoming the development. Americans for Financial Reform Education Fund has slammed the approval, warning that giving crypto firms bank-like privileges without the same level of strict oversight could be risky for the broader financial system. Bank trade groups have also pushed back against the OCC’s willingness to grant charters to crypto firms, expressing concern that it increases systemic risk exposure and creates an uneven playing field with traditional lenders who face more stringent capital requirements.
What Comes Next
Conditional approval is the beginning of the process, not the end of it. To reach final approval and begin operations as Coinbase National Trust Company, the firm must hold an initial board meeting, formalise its corporate bylaws, establish its internal payment rails, and pass a rigorous pre-opening examination conducted by OCC regulators to ensure all security, compliance, and risk management protocols meet national banking standards.
The timeline for full approval has not been confirmed, but analysts suggest that given Coinbase’s existing compliance infrastructure and its long-standing relationship with U.S. regulators, the process is unlikely to face significant delays. When that final approval comes, it will mark the moment that America’s largest crypto exchange formally becomes part of the federally supervised financial system. For the crypto industry, that moment will represent something that once seemed impossible: a native digital asset company operating on equal regulatory footing with the traditional institutions it was built to challenge.













