TLDR
- Coinbase received conditional OCC approval to operate as a trust company.
- The charter would cover custody and payment infrastructure, not retail banking.
- Coinbase said it will not accept retail deposits or use fractional-reserve banking.
- Paul Grewal said the charter could support new crypto payment products.
- Final approval still depends on Coinbase meeting OCC conditions.
Coinbase has received conditional approval from the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to operate as a federally chartered trust company, a step that would place part of its crypto infrastructure business under direct federal supervision if final approval is completed. The company said the charter would apply to trust company activities rather than traditional banking, and Coinbase Chief Executive Brian Armstrong stressed that the firm is not becoming a commercial bank.
Armstrong said the approval brings crypto infrastructure closer to federal regulatory oversight. Coinbase also said the trust structure would not involve accepting retail deposits or using fractional-reserve banking. Instead, the focus is on custody, payments, and related market infrastructure services that could be offered under a single federal framework.
More info: https://t.co/NlQzNKn7Zt
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) April 2, 2026
According to CNBC, Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal said the charter could allow the company to operate payment products, in addition to its custody business, under OCC supervision. He said the firm plans to work with the regulator on payment-related infrastructure products that could broaden the use of crypto payments in the United States.
The approval remains conditional, which means Coinbase must still satisfy regulatory requirements before it can operate as a trust company. Even so, the development marks a new stage in Coinbase’s regulatory strategy as the company seeks a federal route for services that have often been managed through state-by-state licensing.
Trust Charter Supports Custody and Payments, Not Retail Banking
A national trust company is a special-purpose financial institution that can provide services such as custody and investment-related functions but does not operate like a conventional bank. Coinbase said that distinction is important because the company is not seeking to become a deposit-taking institution.
The company’s stated aim is to bring existing crypto infrastructure under a clearer federal structure. That matters for businesses such as custody and settlement, where institutional clients often prefer a single supervisory framework rather than a patchwork of state rules. Grewal said state-based regulation has been a burden for firms in fast-moving sectors such as crypto, where different rules across the country can slow product development and increase compliance costs.
Coinbase’s trust charter effort began last October. The company said at the time that a federal charter could simplify oversight for custody operations and support expansion into additional institutional services. The latest approval suggests that federal agencies are becoming more active in reviewing national trust applications from digital asset firms.
Federal Oversight Trend Expands Across Digital Asset Firms
Coinbase is not the only company pursuing this path. The material provided says several other digital asset and fintech firms have either received conditional approval or are seeking similar treatment.
That group includes Ripple, Fidelity Digital Assets, Paxos, BitGo, Circle’s First National Digital Currency Bank, and other applicants tied to the national trust model.
The broader policy environment also appears to be shifting. Coinbase said direct OCC oversight offers a more workable path than the state-by-state approach that has defined much of the industry’s regulatory experience in recent years. The approval is also being viewed as part of a broader push toward federal oversight of custody and payment infrastructure linked to digital assets.
Coinbase Ties Charter Push to Stablecoin and Payments Strategy
The trust approval also fits into Coinbase’s broader payments strategy. The company has been building around stablecoin-based payments, especially through USDC. Over the past year, it launched Coinbase Payments for platforms and merchants, added wallet integrations and stablecoin checkout, and partnered with companies including Shopify and Stripe to support merchant acceptance of USDC.
.@Coinbase has received conditional OCC charter approval.
We're not becoming a bank, it's a trust company. We're bringing the infrastructure of crypto under federal regulatory oversight.
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) April 2, 2026
Armstrong has also said Coinbase wants to make USDC the leading stablecoin globally and eventually become the top financial services app in the world. The trust company structure could help support that direction by giving Coinbase a federally supervised base for moving, holding, and settling money more efficiently







