U.S. Bank is stepping deeper into digital asset innovation with a new pilot program testing the issuance of a bank-grade stablecoin on the Stellar blockchain.
Conducted in collaboration with PwC and the Stellar Development Foundation, the initiative marks one of the most significant moves yet by a major U.S. financial institution toward programmable on-chain money.
Exploring a Regulated, Bank-Issued Stablecoin
The pilot examines how a traditional, systemically important bank could safely issue its own stablecoin on a public network, something that has long been considered a technical and regulatory challenge. U.S. Bank aims to determine how a fully regulated institution might leverage blockchain for faster payments, tokenized settlements, and improved transfer workflows.
Why Stellar? Control Features Matter to Banks
U.S. Bank selected Stellar specifically for its asset-freezing and transaction-reversal capabilities.
According to Mike Villano, head of digital asset products at U.S. Bancorp, these features provide essential safeguards for institutions that must consider compliance, error correction, and recovery procedures long before deploying on-chain money at scale.
This makes Stellar particularly attractive for banks experimenting with controlled, programmable digital dollars.
A Step Toward Broader Institutional Adoption
The pilot comes at a time when more traditional financial institutions are evaluating blockchain infrastructure for real-world use cases, from settlement to corporate payments to cross-border transfers. A U.S. Bank-issued stablecoin would represent a major milestone in that trend, signaling that programmable digital money is moving from concept to practical implementation.
Continuing U.S. Bank’s Digital Asset Expansion
This effort builds on U.S. Bancorp’s recent push into digital assets:
- •In October 2025, the bank created a dedicated digital assets and funds transfer department.
- •In September 2025, it resumed cryptocurrency custody services, signaling renewed institutional confidence.
Now, by testing a live stablecoin on Stellar, the bank is exploring how blockchain could integrate directly into its core financial operations.
As the pilot evolves, it could lay the groundwork for a future in which major U.S. banks issue their own on-chain dollars, bringing programmable money into mainstream finance.

