The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has introduced a comprehensive framework for stablecoin regulation, moving to integrate digital assets into the traditional banking system. On April 7, 2026, the FDIC Board of Directors voted to approve a critical proposed rulemaking that outlines the requirements for stablecoin issuers under the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act (GENIUS Act). This latest step aims to formalize compliance, reserve, and operational standards before the GENIUS Act takes full effect on January 18, 2027.
The FDIC’s new stablecoin plan targets Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) supervised institutions, specifically permitted payment stablecoin issuers (PPSIs). Under the proposed guidelines, these entities must maintain identifiable reserves that fully back outstanding payment stablecoins on a 1:1 basis. To ensure transparency, issuers will be required to provide monthly disclosures and undergo independent audits of their reserve assets.
This shift follows earlier regulatory steps, including the March 28, 2025, issuance of Financial Institution Letter (FIL-7-2025), which allowed supervised banks to engage in certain crypto activities without prior case-by-case approval.
This initiative arrives as the broader market seeks more legislative clarity. While the CLARITY Act advances through congressional committees to define token status, the FDIC is focusing on the practical plumbing of the financial system. The agency’s framework creates a clear roadmap for state-chartered banks and savings associations to issue stablecoins through subsidiaries, provided they meet strict prudential bars. The push for safety is also echoed by the Financial Modernization Act, introduced in Congress on March 7, 2026, which further explores stablecoin insurance structures.
Strict mandates for reserve management and redemption
The April 2026 proposal introduces rigid safeguards for reserve asset management. PPSIs are prohibited from rehypothecating, pledging, or reusing reserve assets except in limited circumstances. To mitigate systemic risk, the FDIC has set a concentration limit: exposure to any single eligible financial institution for reserve assets cannot exceed 40% of the total reserves. If the value of these reserves ever falls below the 1:1 backing threshold, the issuer must immediately notify the FDIC and provide a corrective action plan.
Redemption rights are a core pillar of the new rules. Issuers must fulfill redemption requests within two business days. Furthermore, they must publish clear redemption policies and provide seven calendar days’ notice before increasing any associated fees. The FDIC has also established a threshold for “significant redemption requests,” defined as any aggregate daily redemption exceeding 10% of the total outstanding issuance value. Such events require immediate notification to the regulator to ensure institutional liquidity remains intact.
Safety extends to how customer assets are handled by custodians. Under the rule, cushions must treat customer assets as property and protect them from general creditors. In cases of tokenized assets, custodians must maintain “control,” meaning no other party can transfer the asset without the custodian’s affirmative consent. This ensures that assets like Bitcoin exchange supply or other digital holdings remain protected within the regulated banking perimeter.
Financial backstops and capital requirements for issuers
To operate within this new regulated environment, stablecoin issuers must meet high financial hurdles. The FDIC has proposed an initial minimum capital requirement of $5 million for the de novo period. After this initial phase, the capital must remain commensurate with the risk of the entity’s specific activities. This financial requirement is joined by a mandatory “operational backstop”—a pool of highly liquid assets equal to at least 12 months of the issuer’s total expenses.
These capital requirements act as a buffer against insolvency, ensuring that the issuer can continue operations without dipping into customer reserves. The focus on liquidity is a direct response to past market volatility where stagnant secondary markets led to collapses. By maintaining a year’s worth of expenses in liquid assets, protected entities are better positioned to handle prolonged periods of low activity or high redemption volume without failing.
Prohibitions on yield and misleading labels
The FDIC has also established clear boundaries regarding what stablecoins cannot do. PPSIs are strictly prohibited from paying interest or providing yield to customers simply for holding or using a stablecoin. This prohibition extends to yield offered through affiliates or third-party partnerships. Furthermore, issuers are banned from extending credit to customers specifically to facilitate the purchase of their own stablecoins, preventing the creation of internal leverage loops.
To avoid consumer confusion with government currency, the FDIC is banning the use of “United States” or similar designations in a stablecoin’s name. Issuers cannot represent their coins as legal tender or claim they are government-guaranteed. These measures are designed to ensure that users understand these are private financial products, not digital versions of the U.S. Dollar backed by the Treasury. They are also relevant as XRP wallet adoption trends and other private networks continue to grow alongside traditional banking rails.
Understanding the limits of FDIC insurance coverage
A major component of the April 7 rulemaking defines how deposit insurance applies to these assets. The FDIC has clarified that stablecoin reserves are not insured on a “pass-through” basis to individual stablecoin holders. Instead, the reserves are treated as corporate deposits of the issuer. This means the total pool is insured only up to the standard maximum deposit insurance amount for the issuing entity itself, not for every individual who owns a token.
Following this rule, issuers are explicitly forbidden from representing that the stablecoins themselves are FDIC-insured. This distinction ensures that the insurance fund is not exposed to the fluctuations of the digital asset market while still providing a basic layer of protection for the corporate entity holding the reserves. The FDIC is currently accepting public feedback on these proposals, with the comment period for the second broad rulemaking set to close on June 9, 2026.
As the industry looks toward the January 2027 effective date for the GENIUS Act, the FDIC is building the infrastructure to bring stablecoins into the mainstream. The framework represents a shift from the unregulated “wild west” of early crypto transfers to a system where stablecoin issuers function more like traditional financial institutions. For the average user, this means better redemption guarantees, but it also signals the end of high-yield interest accounts and unregulated stablecoin names.
