BitGo and ZKsync announced a strategic partnership on March 26, 2026, to develop a full-stack infrastructure enabling banks to issue, transfer, and settle tokenized deposits within existing regulatory frameworks, combining BitGo’s institutional custody with ZKsync’s privacy-preserving Prividium network.
The platform, currently in testing with regulated financial institutions, aims to help banks adopt blockchain-based payments without building complex onchain architecture or stepping outside regulatory boundaries. A broader production rollout is targeted for later in 2026.
The partnership combines BitGo’s institutional-grade custody and wallet services with ZKsync’s Prividium, a permissioned blockchain designed for regulated entities that offers transaction privacy while maintaining transparency for regulatory oversight. The integrated stack includes:
Regulatory compliance modules that automatically enforce jurisdiction-specific requirements
Real-time settlement capabilities that reduce settlement times from days to seconds
Audit trail generation that meets financial regulatory standards
Interoperability features that connect with existing banking systems
The infrastructure incorporates multiple security layers, including multi-signature wallet technology requiring multiple approvals, cold storage solutions for long-term asset protection, real-time monitoring and anomaly detection systems, and insurance coverage for digital assets under custody.
Tokenized deposits represent digital versions of traditional bank deposits that exist on blockchain networks while maintaining full regulatory backing. Unlike stablecoins, which typically operate outside the traditional banking system, tokenized deposits keep funds within it, potentially enabling programmable transactions without altering existing regulatory frameworks. Financial institutions maintain complete control over issuance and management, while the system provides enhanced transparency for regulators.
The technology offers financial institutions near-instant settlement compared to multi-day traditional settlement periods, 24/7 availability versus limited operating hours, reduced operational expenses compared to higher intermediary costs, and automated regulatory compliance versus manual compliance checks.
The partnership emerges amid significant transformation in financial services, with global banks increasingly exploring blockchain applications. Major financial institutions have allocated substantial capital toward digital asset infrastructure development, driven by growing client demand, maturing regulatory frameworks, technological advancements, and competitive pressure from fintech innovators.
Matter Labs CEO Alex Gluchowski stated that tokenized deposits represent “how banks bring money onchain without leaving the regulatory system.” The partnership specifically addresses regulatory concerns that have previously slowed institutional adoption by building compliance directly into the infrastructure, reducing implementation barriers for traditional financial institutions.
Industry analysts view the partnership as a significant milestone, with compliant infrastructure representing a missing link for widespread bank adoption. Initial implementations will likely focus on specific use cases within larger institutions, with successful pilot programs potentially accelerating broader adoption across the banking sector.
Tokenized deposits are digital representations of traditional bank deposits that exist on blockchain networks. They maintain the same regulatory backing and insurance protections as conventional deposits while enabling faster settlement and enhanced functionality through blockchain technology.
The partnership provides banks with compliant infrastructure to issue and manage digital deposits. The technology reduces settlement times from days to seconds, lowers operational costs, and maintains full regulatory compliance within existing banking frameworks.
The infrastructure is currently being tested with regulated financial institutions, with a broader production rollout targeted for later in 2026. The phased approach allows for thorough testing and refinement before wider deployment.