US and UK regulators have announced a coordinated initiative to improve cross-border access for regulated stablecoins, aiming to facilitate smoother international payments and support the tokenization of financial markets in both countries.
Joint framework advances global stablecoin integration
The agreement, unveiled through the Transatlantic Taskforce for Markets of the Future, seeks to align stablecoin standards in the United States and the United Kingdom. The taskforce was established in September 2025 by US Treasury officials and their UK counterparts, including Chancellor Rachel Reeves. The group consulted with market participants and regulatory experts to develop unified proposals for digital assets and capital markets.
Under the plan, a stablecoin approved in one jurisdiction will have clearer entry pathways to the other, promoting cross-border payment efficiency. However, each token must still meet local legal and licensing requirements and secure approval from relevant supervisory authorities in each country.
Regulators in both nations emphasized the need for one-to-one reserve backing, strict asset segregation, and unambiguous redemption rights as essential safeguards for stablecoin holders.
The framework aims to encourage responsible stablecoin use for payments, settlement of securities, and transactions in tokenized markets. Regulators stated that clear and consistent standards will help unlock new opportunities across the financial sector.
Strong reserve requirements and user protections
The joint regulatory approach specifies that stablecoins intended as payment tokens must maintain high-quality, liquid asset reserves equal to or greater than the total supply in circulation. These reserves must remain completely separate from the issuer’s own corporate funds, reducing the risk that company debts could affect customer assets.
Holders will be entitled to transparent redemption rights, ensuring timely access to the core value of their tokens. The framework also addresses insolvency and bankruptcy situations, outlining procedures to prioritize user claims over reserve assets during issuer failures.
Depending on a country’s laws, these claims could have seniority over other obligations, increasing legal protection for stablecoin users if an issuer collapses.
Officials from both countries have discouraged overly strict local reserve rules, saying that excessive ring-fencing could limit global stablecoin operations, raise compliance costs, and narrow competition. Instead, the plan favors similar regulatory outcomes rather than identical rulesets, striving for effective oversight without sacrificing domestic flexibility.
US and UK regulatory landscapes converge
This cooperative move arrives as both the US and the UK progress with their own frameworks for stablecoin oversight. In July 2025, President Donald Trump signed the GENIUS Act, establishing a federal foundation for payment stablecoin issuers, with requirements for reserve management, public disclosure, and controls against illegal activities.
In June 2026, the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) finalized regulations for licensed stablecoin issuers, covering token issuance and safeguarding of backing assets. The FCA will supervise most qualifying stablecoins, while systemic tokens will receive joint oversight from the FCA and the Bank of England. The Bank has proposed a code of practice for significant sterling-backed tokens, focusing on redemption reliability, high-quality reserves, and user protection. Final rules are expected by the end of 2026.
These domestic reforms set the legal foundation for mutual recognition arrangements going forward. Beyond payments, the collaborative plan includes stablecoin applications in financial settlements and calls for proportionate banking access for legitimate digital asset firms.
The next steps will center on refining cross-border market entry, supervisory collaboration, and formal recognition processes as the US and UK seek integrated but flexible digital asset standards.
Mini dictionary: Transatlantic Taskforce for Markets of the Future – A joint body established by US and UK authorities to coordinate policy, regulation, and innovation in digital asset markets and financial technology.
| Criteria | US requirements | UK requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Issuer licensing | GENIUS Act federal license | FCA authorization |
| Reserve management | High-quality, liquid, segregated assets | Fully backed, segregated, supervised |
| Oversight body | Federal regulators | FCA/Bank of England |
| Redemption rights | Clear, timely, prioritized | Clear, timely, prioritized |
The plan moves beyond identical regulatory rules, instead favoring comparable outcomes to ensure both effective oversight and continued market competition.




