Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda announced a sandbox project to test blockchain-based settlement of central bank money, targeting domestic interbank transfers Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda announced a sandbox project to test blockchain-based settlement of central bank money, targeting domestic interbank transfers

The Bank of Japan Is Testing Blockchain for Interbank Settlements

2026/03/03 20:58
4 min read
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Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda announced a sandbox project to test blockchain-based settlement of central bank money, targeting domestic interbank transfers and securities settlements across a three-phase trial running through early 2028.

What the BOJ Is Actually Testing

This is not a retail digital yen project. The BOJ has a separate retail CBDC pilot running in parallel, and no decision has been made on whether to issue a digital yen for the general public. The sandbox announced by Ueda is specifically focused on wholesale infrastructure, meaning the settlement of current account deposits held by financial institutions at the central bank.

The existing settlement system is BOJ-NET, a real-time gross settlement system that processes interbank transfers and securities transactions. The blockchain trial is not replacing BOJ-NET. It is testing whether blockchain-based settlement infrastructure can offer comparable or superior performance on efficiency, security, and interoperability before any production deployment is considered.

The shift Ueda is signaling is from theoretical to practical. The BOJ has been studying distributed ledger technology for years, as have most major central banks. Moving to a sandbox means actual testing with real systems, not just research papers and working groups.

The Three-Phase Timeline

Phase 1 runs in Q2 2026 and focuses on developing the initial blockchain prototype. Phase 2 covers the full year 2027 and involves active testing with selected private financial institutions. The conclusion phase targets early 2028 with publication of comprehensive findings and evaluation.

That timeline is measured. A central bank building institutional settlement infrastructure on blockchain has to be. BOJ-NET processes trillions of yen in daily transactions. The margin for error in replacing or augmenting it is effectively zero. A two-year testing horizon before any conclusions are published reflects the stakes rather than bureaucratic slowness.

The 2027 phase involving private financial institutions is where the practical insights will come from. Lab testing of a prototype tells you whether the technology works in isolation. Testing with actual banks in actual settlement conditions tells you whether it works in the context of the operational and compliance requirements that real financial infrastructure has to meet.

The Smart Contract Risk Warning

Ueda’s announcement included a specific caution about smart contract design risks that could threaten market stability. That caveat is not standard regulatory boilerplate. It reflects a genuine concern that has emerged from watching smart contract failures across DeFi.

Automated execution based on contract code that contains bugs, edge cases, or design flaws can produce outcomes that participants didn’t intend and that are difficult or impossible to reverse. In retail DeFi, that risk manifests as exploits and protocol failures. In wholesale settlement infrastructure processing interbank transfers, the same failure mode could propagate across the financial system in ways that are harder to contain.

The BOJ flagging this in the same breath as launching the trial suggests the institution has thought carefully about the failure modes and intends to evaluate them as part of the sandbox work. That’s more sophisticated than simply announcing a blockchain pilot without addressing the risk profile.

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Project Agorá and the Global Context

The BOJ’s trial aligns with Project Agorá, a Bank for International Settlements initiative exploring tokenized central bank money for cross-border wholesale payments. Several major central banks are participating, and the project is exploring how tokenized reserves on a shared ledger could simplify the correspondent banking chains that currently make cross-border institutional payments slow and expensive.

Japan’s sandbox fits into that global alignment. Domestic interbank settlement is the first step. Cross-border interoperability is the longer-term ambition that projects like Agorá are building toward. A central bank that has tested and validated its own blockchain settlement infrastructure domestically is better positioned to participate in multilateral cross-border tokenization projects than one that hasn’t.

The HKMA and Shanghai blockchain trade finance MoU covered earlier this week represents the same trajectory at a different layer of the financial stack. Central banks testing settlement rails, trade finance authorities testing document digitization: the infrastructure for a blockchain-native financial system is being assembled from multiple directions simultaneously.

The post The Bank of Japan Is Testing Blockchain for Interbank Settlements  appeared first on ETHNews.

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