Japan’s three major banks — Mitsubishi UFJ (MUFG), Sumitomo Mitsui (SMBC), and Mizuho — are jointly advancing a yen-pegged stablecoin project, according to a report from the German crypto media outlet BTC-ECHO. The project has also received backing from Japan’s national financial regulator, the Financial Services Agency (FSA). This means Japan is no longer just at the “stablecoin legislation is in place” stage — systemically important banks are now issuing tokens themselves. Worth noting: Japan already established a legal framework for stablecoin issuance back in June 2023 through an amendment to the Payment Services Act, which requires issuers to be banks, trust companies, or registered fund transfer businesses. The joint entry of the three major banks is precisely the landmark move that puts this framework into practice.
Editorial take: What this actually means for USDT card users
The bottom line first: this is a yen-pegged (JPY-pegged) stablecoin, not an expansion of the USDT ecosystem. For the vast majority of readers who top up virtual cards with ₮ for spending, the fees, limits, and availability of your current card won’t change because of this news in the short term.
That said, two threads are worth watching over the medium-to-long term:
- On-ramp channels. If Japanese local users can eventually deposit and withdraw funds directly using a bank-grade yen stablecoin, the “yen → stablecoin → virtual card” chain will be far smoother than the current route of buying USDT through an exchange. This is especially relevant to users of cards like Bybit Card that are tied to exchange balances.
- Currency competition. If bank-issued yen stablecoins gain preferential treatment from local merchants and compliant channels, USDT’s relative edge in Japan’s local payment scenarios could be diluted — but this is a 12-month-plus story, not a 7-day or 30-day one.
On timing: within 7 days, expect no changes at all; within 30 days, we may see the project’s formal naming and pilot partners announced; within 90 days, an early channel usable by individuals could possibly emerge. Readers planning to apply for a new Asia-Pacific virtual card in the meantime can check out our MPCard review — its Asia Elite variant runs on Asia-Pacific card BINs, which is an entirely separate system from a yen stablecoin and doesn’t conflict with it.
Historical comparison: what’s the same, what’s different
This makes more sense on a timeline.
After Japan’s amended Payment Services Act took effect in 2023, the market expected stablecoins to emerge quickly, but actual progress was slow — precisely because the compliance bar was so high that only bank-grade institutions could play. This time, with the three major banks jointly stepping in, the similarity is that everything still operates within that 2023 framework; the difference is that this time the supply side (issuers) is actually moving, rather than the policy side issuing empty promises.
It’s also worth comparing this to the EU’s full MiCAR rollout in 2024: MiCAR likewise requires stablecoin issuers to be licensed, hold segregated reserves, and undergo regular audits, yet European banks’ response has largely been to watch from the sidelines rather than jump in. Japan’s banking sector, by contrast, is moving faster than Europe by directly co-issuing a token. This suggests that regulatory certainty (rather than regulatory laxity) is the real precondition for institutional entry — a broadly positive signal for USDT holders: the clearer the regulation, the more room compliant cards have to survive long-term.
Regulatory and compliance boundaries
Japan’s current stance on stablecoins is clear permission, under strict licensing: issuers must be regulated institutions, while the use side (individual holding and spending) is not prohibited. This stands in sharp contrast to mainland China’s “explicit prohibition” — see our Mainland China compliance guide for that boundary.
For individual USDT card users, two distinct boundaries need to be clarified:
- Holding and spending USDT is not illegal in Japan, but exchanging it through unregistered channels may touch a regulatory gray area under fund transfer business rules;
- A bank-issued yen stablecoin, once launched, will come with a full built-in KYC and local tax-reporting chain — meaning convenience and traceability go hand in hand, with almost no anonymity.
For Japan-specific compliance details, readers are encouraged to keep following updates on our Japan compliance guide; the source of record remains the official FSA page.
Key milestones worth watching next
- Formal project naming and issuer structure: will the three banks jointly issue a single token, or issue separately while sharing a clearing layer? This determines liquidity concentration.
- Pilot merchant list: if convenience stores or major e-commerce players are onboarded early, adoption could move much faster than expected.
- Exchange bridge with existing tokens: whether the yen stablecoin can be freely exchanged with USDT/USDC is the key variable determining whether it affects the ₮ on-ramp.
- FSA follow-up announcements: watch the English news section of the FSA official website — any rule updates will appear there first.
Editorial recommendations
- Existing holders of any USDT virtual card: no action needed. This news doesn’t affect your current card — fees, limits, and the spending process all remain unchanged.
- Japan-based users planning to spend with stablecoins long-term: you can add the bank-issued yen stablecoin to your “revisit in 6 months” watchlist, but at this stage it’s not yet a usable product, so there’s no need to delay your current card setup for it.
- Asia-Pacific users currently choosing a card: prioritize decisions based on current availability and fees, referencing our 2026 Virtual Card Top 5 and MPCard review. The yen stablecoin is a long-term variable and shouldn’t be a reason to delay your card choice today.
- What not to do: don’t rush to transfer funds into any “early-bird channel” just because “banks are about to issue a token” — there is currently no formal product available to individuals, and any channel claiming a “Japanese bank stablecoin presale/airdrop” should be treated as a red flag.
We will update this article once the project is formally named or the FSA publishes further details.