SWIFT's November 2026 ISO 20022 compliance deadline creates a fork in the road for two of the most bank-friendly blockchain networks.
SWIFT will begin rejecting cross-border payment messages that use unstructured postal addresses from Nov. 14, 2026, accelerating a transition that favors ISO 20022-compliant blockchain networks including Ripple's XRP Ledger and Hedera Hashgraph.
"The revamped gold standard drives evolution that's particularly favorable for DLT-based chains," SWIFT's community channel said in a post on X on Friday, warning that non-compliant banking institutions risk being discontinued from the CBPR+ messaging system.
RippleNet, the San Francisco-based payments network built on XRP, counts more than 300 banks and payment providers among its partners. Its On-Demand Liquidity system eliminates the need for pre-funded nostro accounts, offering instant settlement that aligns with SWIFT's push to meet G20 goals for improving data quality and transparency in cross-border payments. Hedera Hashgraph, meanwhile, has positioned its network for logging ISO-related messages on-chain and tokenizing real-world assets, a use case that extends beyond pure payment processing.
The divergence in strategy means XRP and HBAR serve different roles in the SWIFT-compliant future — XRP as a settlement layer for high-volume cross-border payments, HBAR as an enterprise-grade data and tokenization platform — with both networks positioned to capture institutional flow as the November deadline approaches.
XRP's Settlement Edge
Ripple's native payments network has built-in compatibility with SWIFT's ISO 20022 standard, allowing banks to send and receive structured data without format conversions. The company's New Payments Scheme program, which pilots with more than 30 banks as of June 2026, demonstrates how XRP's low-cost, immediate processing can complement SWIFT's existing infrastructure. Through ODL, XRP provides instant liquidity for cross-border transfers, improving compliance screening and straight-through processing compared with the traditional multi-day settlement window.
HBAR's Enterprise Play
Hedera Hashgraph targets a different slice of the SWIFT ecosystem. Its network is designed for logging ISO-compliant messages on-chain and managing complex enterprise requirements such as real-world asset tokenization. While HBAR has less payments-specific traction than XRP — Ripple has processed billions of dollars in cross-border volume — Hedera's governance model and enterprise focus make it suitable for banks seeking a broader spectrum of features beyond payment digitization.
What to Watch
With the Nov. 14, 2026, deadline now fixed, banks face a choice between two ISO 20022-compliant blockchain networks. XRP's established payments infrastructure gives it a first-mover advantage among the 300-plus institutions already on RippleNet. HBAR's enterprise tokenization capabilities could attract banks looking to expand beyond payments into structured data and asset management on-chain. The next six months will determine which network captures the larger share of institutional flow as SWIFT phases out its legacy messaging standard.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.