
BIS tokenization work has cleared its atomic settlement prototype phase and will graduate to real-value cross-border payment trials.
Summary
- Project Agora demonstrated tokenised cross-border settlement across seven central banks and more than 40 financial institutions.
- The Bank of Canada joined Wednesday, with real-value transactions set as the next testing milestone.
- The prototype preserves correspondent banking, sanctions screening, and SWIFT compatibility rather than replacing them.
BIS tokenization work has cleared its atomic settlement prototype phase and will graduate to real-value cross-border payment trials. The Bank for International Settlements confirmed the move Wednesday.
Project Agora, a public-private collaboration with seven central banks and more than 40 financial institutions, showed that tokenised commercial bank deposits can settle against tokenised central bank reserves on a shared platform with finality across jurisdictions.
Why the BIS tokenization prototype matters for global banks
The prototype demonstrated atomic settlement, where every leg of a cross-border transaction clears at the same instant or not at all. Banks involved said the design compresses correspondent flows that currently take days into seconds.
“Once you know you have everything to run the transaction, you settle it in one go,” BIS Deputy General Manager Andrea Maechler said in remarks accompanying the release. The Bank of Canada also joined the project on Wednesday.
Project Agora participants include the Bank of England, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Bank of Japan, Banque de France, Swiss National Bank, Bank of Mexico, and Bank of Korea. The Institute of International Finance convenes the private-sector side.
“It will benefit the entire financial system,” said Tim Adams, head of the IIF, in a statement carried alongside the announcement.
How the unified ledger fits existing payment rails
The prototype keeps correspondent banking intact rather than replacing it. The 97-page final report from BIS calls correspondent banking the “backbone of global payments” and stresses that sanctions screening and anti-money-laundering controls stay inside the system.
That framing is deliberate. Project Agora is not built to disintermediate banks like crypto-native stablecoin networks aim to, but to give existing institutions faster rails compatible with SWIFT and ISO 20022. The contrast with stablecoin corridors is structural.
Smart contracts on the platform let banks embed compliance checks, conditional payment triggers, and workflow logic directly into transactions. The report flagged reduced reconciliation, fewer manual interventions, and lower operational risk as the main efficiency gains.
A separate legal analysis attached to the report found settlement finality is achievable across all seven participating jurisdictions. Further work is needed on technical and contractual requirements tailored to each legal regime.
What real-value testing changes for tokenization
The next phase will move beyond synthetic transfers and route actual money through the prototype, marking the first time a BIS Innovation Hub effort of this scale has graduated to live transactions.
Bank of Canada Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers said tokenisation “has the potential to make these payments faster, cheaper and more efficient and secure,” confirming the central bank’s participation in the next test phase.
The timing fits the broader tokenization shift among Wall Street firms. DTCC plans to roll out tokenised settlement for stocks, ETFs and Treasuries. Nasdaq and ICE are both developing blockchain-based systems for tokenised equities.
Bernstein analysts have called 2026 a “tokenization supercycle,” with stablecoin supply and on-chain Treasury demand both climbing into year-end.
A final report on Project Agora is expected in the first half of this year. The mid-2026 update will be the first checkpoint for whether real-value testing holds up at scale.


