Regulators in the United Kingdom are seeking to position tokenization and new forms of digital currency as core components of the nation’s future retail payment infrastructure. In an update published on behalf of the Payments Vision Delivery Committee, HM Treasury highlighted that these measures aim to foster a more diverse multi-currency ecosystem. As the UK’s chief economic and finance policy body, HM Treasury plays a central role in financial regulation.
The revised roadmap emphasizes that programmable payments based on tokenization are now among the product-level regulatory priorities to spur innovation in the UK payments sector. Officials are working toward an infrastructure that allows emerging digital currencies to interoperate alongside traditional payment systems.
Recent amendments to the National Payments Vision, first released in November, go beyond merely upgrading current systems; they also support the integration of new financial instruments into everyday payment flows. This approach is intended to bring both traditional monetary tools and digital asset-based solutions under a unified legal and operational framework.
This week, the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) released its comprehensive regulatory framework for crypto assets. The regulator confirmed that the license application period for crypto firms will begin in September and run until February 28, 2027. The new regulatory regime is set to take effect from October 25, 2027.
Under this framework, trading platforms, custodial service providers, stablecoin issuers, staking firms, and other intermediaries will be required to secure FCA approval in order to operate in the UK. The sector is thus moving towards a more clearly defined, unified supervisory structure based on transparent rules.
Back in April, the UK government announced it would revamp payment regulations to support adoption of new payment technologies, including stablecoins and tokenization. On April 21, HM Treasury and Economic Secretary to the Treasury Lucy Rigby stated that reforms to payment services and e-money rules would be open to public consultation.
Planned changes aim to bring conventional and tokenized payments together under a single regulatory umbrella. As part of this shift, both stablecoins and tokenized deposits will be formally recognized as elements of the new system.
In May, the Bank of England proposed extending settlement system operating hours to cover most of the day. This initiative is part of a larger effort, coordinated with the FCA, to advance the UK’s preparedness for tokenized finance in wholesale markets.
The central bank indicated that longer operating hours could support cross-border payments and facilitate new payment and settlement models as tokenization evolves. The Bank intends to collect feedback on the proposal until July 3 and expects to publish a report with responses during the summer.
Separately, the FCA recently highlighted that tokenization and distributed ledger technologies could enhance efficiency in fund management and foster innovation within the UK’s asset management industry.
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