South Korea to tokenize government bonds via wholesale CBDC in 2027

- South Korea’s finance ministry confirmed a 2027 pilot to issue tokenized government bonds on infrastructure tied to the Bank of Korea’s wholesale CBDC, part of its second-half 2026 economic strategy.
- The country expects to also have its CBDC interoperable with external blockchain networks.
- This comes alongside plans for Korean won stablecoin rules, spot crypto ETFs, and a plan for tokenized securities in February 2027.
South Korea is actively working towards piloting tokenized government bonds in 2027 on infrastructure linked to the Bank of Korea’s wholesale CBDC, the country’s finance ministry has announced today. This puts an official date on a plan that was only a proposal until now.
The commitment to the pilot for 2027 was presented at a cabinet meeting on July 14, and is embedded in the Ministry of Economy and Finance’s economic growth strategy for the second half of 2026. The pilot would issue and manage sovereign debt in tokenized form using the CBDC system South Korea’s central bank has been building.
South Korea’s blockchain pilot and CBDC leaning
The strategy document did not name which government bonds would be included in the tokenization process or who would be able to take part. Neither were any particular blockchains noted or mentioned.
It also did not say whether the pilot covers the initial sale of debt, secondary trading, or only post-trade settlement.
However, the government specified a goal of ensuring the Bank of Korea studies how to make its CBDC infrastructure interoperable with outside blockchain networks. This would let the bank’s own permissioned ledger connect to external blockchains instead of just running as a closed payment tool within the country.
The idea traces back to Bank of Korea Governor Hyun Song Shin, who called government bonds the “big prize” for tokenization during a July 1 panel at the European Central Bank Forum on Central Banking. Shin proposed having tokenized bonds, central bank funds, and tokenized bank deposits all on one blockchain, extending the BOK’s existing Project Hangang.
The central bank is also not blind to the possible risks, warning that faster and always accessible settlement can spread financial stress more quickly and bring other unwanted exposures.
Stablecoins, spot ETFs, and stalled policies
The South Korean government also announced that it will advance the Digital Asset Basic Act for passage in the second half of 2026, a law that would set rules and a legal basis for conducting businesses with Korean won-pegged stablecoins. The bill had been slated for the first quarter but reportedly got delayed by the US-Iran conflict, local elections, and the timing of a National Assembly committee.
Ten digital-asset and stablecoin bills from the Democratic Party and the People Power Party are currently pending in the legislature, waiting to be sat on and signed into law.
Alongside the new law, officials also plan to bring cross-border stablecoin transactions into the country’s regulated system and revise the Capital Markets Act to allow South Korea’s first spot crypto ETFs. The government also intends to trade Global Voluntary Carbon Market credits on a blockchain in cooperation with international bodies.
South Korea private sector already ahead
Ripple and Kyobo Life Insurance, one of South Korea’s largest life insurers, had previously settled what they described as the country’s first tokenized government bond on April 15, 2026. The deal used Ripple’s blockchain to complete almost immediately, replacing the standard two-day cycle.
There are also plans for a Ministry of Economy and Finance pilot that would use tokenized bank deposits to handle state spending, with a launch targeted for the fourth quarter of 2026 in the administrative city of Sejong.
The blockchain interests come after a larger bet on AI. Seoul designated physical AI, AI data centers, and semiconductors as three “Mega Projects,” and plans 800 trillion won ($535.6 billion) in chip investment to build a second manufacturing hub in the southwestern part of the country.
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Opeyemi Olanrewaju
Opeyemi specializes in creating and refining high-quality content focused on cryptocurrency, global financial markets and the economy. He graduated from the University of Ibadan with an MBBS degree. He has worked as Editor-in-Chief for his College’s editorial publication and previously at CFA. For over six years, he has helped safeguard uniqueness as news editor at Cryptopolitan.
















