SWIFT is pushing its cross-border payments strategy toward a blockchain-based shared ledger, a move that has brought XRP and the XRP Ledger back into the institutional conversation. The initiative, presented after demonstrations at Sibos 2025, involves more than 40 banks and is targeting a live scheme by mid-2026, with more than 25 banks expected to go live by June 2026.
For banks, custodians and liquidity managers, the significance lies less in the headline technology and more in what it could change operationally. If an on-chain bridge currency becomes part of payment flows, institutions will have to rethink how they fund accounts, manage settlement timing and oversee compliance around conversions and custody.
What if sending money across borders felt as seamless as sending it domestically?
Last year, we set out to transform the cross‑border payment experience with the launch of a new Swift payments scheme – designed to deliver fast, predictable and transparent payments worldwide.… pic.twitter.com/bDsfV64nVk
— Swift (@swiftcommunity) March 23, 2026
XRP is being positioned as a liquidity option, not a universal mandate
Under the structure described, XRP would serve as an optional liquidity rail within a broader settlement design. The process would involve converting fiat into XRP, moving the value across the XRP Ledger, and then converting it back into the destination currency, with the stated goal of reducing the capital tied up in traditional correspondent banking arrangements.
Supporters of that approach point to the XRP Ledger’s speed and cost profile. The case for XRPL rests on settlement times measured in seconds, throughput around 1,500 transactions per second and very low on-chain fees, characteristics that are being framed as suitable for near-real-time settlement in selected cross-border use cases.
Ripple’s existing institutional products are part of that backdrop as well. Its On-Demand Liquidity service and the growth of RLUSD are being cited as evidence that supporting rails and liquidity tools already exist for institutions that may want to operate within, or alongside, a SWIFT-led architecture.
Deutsche Bank’s role illustrates the hybrid direction many large institutions appear to be taking. The bank has been named as a participant in SWIFT’s shared-ledger work while also being described as using Ripple technology internally, suggesting that banks do not necessarily see consortium infrastructure and third-party liquidity rails as mutually exclusive.
SWIFT is testing several technologies as it moves toward launch
At the same time, SWIFT’s work has not been built around XRP alone. Trials and evaluations have included other digital-asset technologies, including HBAR, and a 2025 initiative reportedly favored Ethereum Layer-2 infrastructure through Linea, pointing to a broader multi-asset and multi-technology evaluation rather than a single-token commitment.
That makes the June 2026 target especially important. The go-live window will be the real test of whether the promised efficiency gains can survive operational reality, including interoperability across institutions, custody robustness, reconciliation workflows and regulatory alignment in different jurisdictions.
For market participants, the immediate focus is practical rather than theoretical. Operational teams will need to map liquidity corridors, refine custody and conversion processes, and confirm how settlement finality and audit trails will work before any live rollout begins. If those systems hold up, the appeal will be clear: less capital trapped in nostro and vostro structures, and faster settlement across cross-border flows. If they do not, the industry will discover quickly that technical capability alone is not enough to reshape payments infrastructure.
