The Solana Foundation has signed a memorandum of understanding with South Korea’s Toss Bank to explore blockchain-powered remittance services, stablecoin transfers, digital payments, and tokenized real-world assets.
The agreement, announced on June 22, comes as Toss Bank’s parent company, Viva Republica, reportedly prepares for a U.S. initial public offering and seeks to expand its presence in digital financial services.
Solana deepens banking push with Toss Bank alliance
The first phase of the partnership will focus on a proof-of-concept designed to test Solana-based cross-border remittance and settlement infrastructure.
Jin-hyun Park, Head of Strategy at Toss Bank, says this collaboration marks the starting point for a phased pilot project to apply a blockchain-based digital financial infrastructure to the innovative financial services Toss Bank already operates.
Park added that the initiative aims to help build a system where the bank’s customers can access “faster and more cost-effective global digital finance with Solana.”
The partnership represents the first publicly disclosed direct collaboration between a South Korean internet-only bank and the Solana ecosystem, potentially positioning the network as a settlement layer for regulated financial institutions in Asia.
Stablecoins move from crypto trading to mainstream finance
The Toss Bank initiative arrives amid accelerating institutional interest in stablecoins, particularly for remittance corridors where traditional payment systems often remain expensive and slow.
Solana has increasingly emerged as a preferred blockchain for financial institutions seeking near-instant settlement and lower transaction costs.
The network has spent the past year expanding its footprint among banks, payment companies, and asset managers exploring tokenization and on-chain settlement models.
According to the Solana Foundation, institutional adoption across stablecoin payments, custody services, and tokenized assets has intensified in 2026.
The ecosystem reported more than $2.5 billion in tokenized real-world assets earlier this year, alongside rising participation from banks and financial service providers.
Bank for International Settlements, says in its annual report for 2025 that Tokenisation represents a transformative innovation to both improve the old and enable the new.
Industry observers note that South Korea has become an increasingly important battleground for digital asset innovation.
Toss reportedly serves tens of millions of users across banking, payments, insurance and securities businesses, giving blockchain infrastructure providers access to a substantial retail audience if pilot programs progress beyond testing stages.
South Korea’s regulatory landscape is evolving
The announcement also comes as South Korean authorities continue refining oversight of crypto-related activities.
Local reports indicate regulators plan to strengthen monitoring requirements for overseas digital asset transfers later this year, adding pressure on financial institutions to develop compliant blockchain-based settlement frameworks.
Meanwhile, Viva Republica has reportedly been examining broader Web3 opportunities, including trademark filings related to Korean won-backed stablecoins and research into blockchain infrastructure development.
The broader trend extends well beyond South Korea. Financial institutions globally have accelerated experimentation with tokenized deposits, stablecoins, and blockchain settlement systems.
Several banking and payment firms have recently announced initiatives leveraging Solana infrastructure for digital asset services, underscoring growing confidence in public blockchain networks as enterprise-grade financial rails.
While decentralized finance and memecoin trading previously dominated activity on the network, institutional adoption narratives centered on payments, tokenization, and regulated financial applications are increasingly shaping investor sentiment.
Whether the pilot ultimately translates into production-scale remittance services remains uncertain.
However, the collaboration highlights a notable shift underway in digital finance: banks are moving beyond observing blockchain technology and are beginning to test it as a practical component of their payment and settlement operations.