UBS is moving deeper into tokenized money experiments after joining six other Swiss institutions to test a Swiss franc-pegged stablecoin inside a controlled digital sandbox announced on April 8, 2026. The project is designed to connect blockchain-based payment rails with the franc while giving major banks direct operational experience with tokenized settlement in a live but limited environment.
The group is not launching a public product yet. Instead, it is building a supervised testing framework for 2026 that limits participants and transaction volumes while allowing real payment simulations. Swiss Stablecoin AG will provide the issuance infrastructure, while the participating banks will explore how tokenized francs could work in programmable payments, cross-border transfers and faster liquidity flows.
A broader banking coalition is now involved
The consortium brings together UBS, PostFinance, Sygnum, Raiffeisen, Zürcher Kantonalbank, Banque Cantonale Vaudoise and Swiss Stablecoin AG. That lineup gives the initiative more weight than a narrow proof of concept because it places large incumbent institutions inside the same experimental structure.
The sandbox also builds on earlier groundwork. In September 2025, UBS, PostFinance and Sygnum completed a proof of concept under the Swiss Bankers Association that tested legally binding interbank payments on a public blockchain and an escrow-style exchange involving tokenized real-world assets. This new phase is meant to push that work beyond theory and into broader operational testing.
The focus is practical, not promotional
What stands out in this effort is its emphasis on learning rather than immediate commercialization. The banks are using the sandbox to understand how custody, settlement, compliance, liquidity management and client-facing systems behave when tokenized francs move through real workflows.
That approach reflects a broader strategic choice. Swiss banks appear determined to help shape tokenized money infrastructure themselves rather than leave that role entirely to startups or foreign stablecoin issuers. By testing the model together, they can evaluate whether existing banking controls can coexist with blockchain-based payment mechanisms before any wider rollout is considered.
The real value will come from the 2026 results
The sandbox will remain open through 2026 and may expand to include additional banks, companies and institutions during the testing period. That makes the project less a closed pilot and more a structured environment for gathering evidence about how tokenized francs might function at scale.
Those results could matter well beyond the banks involved. If the testing shows that tokenized Swiss-franc settlement can work within existing legal and operational frameworks, it could influence how institutional and corporate users approach treasury operations, cross-border payments and tokenized asset settlement in the future.
