OCC Grants Circle a National Trust Bank Charter
Circle announced this morning that the OCC has granted final approval to establish First National Digital Currency Bank, N.A., which will operate as Circle National Trust. The application was filed June 30, 2025; conditional approval came December 12, 2025; final approval landed today.
What the charter is, and isn't. A national trust bank is a fiduciary charter, not a full-service bank. No deposits, no lending, no FDIC insurance, and no automatic Federal Reserve master account. And the corporate architecture matters: per the OCC's own approval letter, USDC issuance is slated to move to a New York limited purpose trust company, not to the national bank. Circle National Trust is the custody-and-trustee layer—managing the USDC Reserve on a directed basis and acting as collateral trustee for USDC holders.
What Circle can do now that it couldn't yesterday. Until now, Circle ran on a patchwork—state money transmitter licenses (MTLs), the NYDFS relationship, and third-party custodians and managers for its reserve stack. The charter lets Circle operate its own OCC-examined fiduciary custodian, with a path to pulling reserve management in-house under federal oversight. The approved business plan also permits expansion: depending on demand, the bank may offer custody directly to a limited set of institutional customers, explicitly focusing on banks and regulated derivatives organizations. Add national preemption of state-by-state trust licensing, and Circle has converted a compliance patchwork into a single federal supervisory relationship.
What it means for USDC adoption. The practical effect is the removal of the counterparty-risk discount that institutional compliance departments apply to non-bank crypto firms. A bank treasurer or clearinghouse evaluating USDC rails can now point to an OCC-supervised entity in the stack—the same examination framework their own institution answers to. It completes Circle's GENIUS Act positioning, sharpens the institutional distinction against offshore competitors, and makes "federally regulated digital dollar infrastructure" a literal description rather than a marketing phrase. What it does not do— yet—is change how USDC is issued or how reserves are managed.
What it means for traditional banks. This move further confirms that banks are Circle’s target customers. The business plan names them as the intended custody clientele, and a federally chartered counterparty is exactly what a bank risk committee needs to approve building on USDC. This now introduces a crypto-native firm to the federal perimeter competing for institutional digital-asset custody—a business BNY, State Street, and others have been circling for years.
For bank strategy teams, the uncomfortable takeaway isn’t “Circle is a threat.” It’s that the regulatory-uncertainty excuse for inaction has vanished. The GENIUS Act is law, the charter path is open and demonstrably passable, and the firms that moved early now hold federal charters. The wall between crypto infrastructure and federal banking is coming down, on the OCC’s terms, one fiduciary charter at a time.
FAQ:
Is Circle now a bank?
Not in the everyday sense. Circle National Trust is a national trust bank — a fiduciary charter under OCC supervision. It cannot take deposits, make loans, or offer FDIC insurance, and it does not automatically get a Federal Reserve master account.
Does the OCC charter change how USDC is issued?
No. Per the OCC's approval documents, USDC issuance is slated to sit with a separate New York limited purpose trust company. Circle National Trust is the custody and trustee layer, with USDC Reserve management planned as a future capability.
What can Circle do now that it couldn't before?
Operate its own federally regulated fiduciary custodian for digital assets, with an approved path to offering custody to institutional customers such as banks and regulated derivatives organizations, and eventually to bring USDC Reserve management under federal oversight.
Why does this matter for traditional banks?
Two ways: banks are Circle's target custody customers and now have a federally supervised counterparty to build on, and Circle is simultaneously a new competitor inside the federal perimeter for institutional digital-asset custody.
Was Circle the only firm approved?
No. In December 2025 the OCC conditionally approved five digital-asset firms — Circle, Ripple, Paxos, BitGo, and Fidelity Digital Assets — while Coinbase and Stripe's Bridge were not approved, signaling the OCC is gating rather than rubber-stamping.
The Stablecoin Strategist delivers enforcement-focused intelligence on stablecoin regulation for operators, counsel, and institutions navigating the GENIUS Act cycle. This is analysis, not legal advice; no attorney-client relationship is formed by reading it.