Bermuda just took the most concrete step yet toward becoming what it calls the “world’s first fully onchain national economy.” The Atlantic island territory announced on May 12 that it will begin migrating core components of its national payments and financial-services infrastructure to the Stellar network.
The pilot program, built in collaboration with the Stellar Development Foundation, will let Bermudians receive wages, pay merchants, settle government fees, and manage digital assets through Stellar-based wallets. Bermuda has been telegraphing this move since January, when officials laid out the vision at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
What the pilot actually covers
Bermuda is targeting the full stack of everyday financial activity: payroll, retail commerce, government fee collection, and digital asset custody. Stellar-based wallets will serve as the primary interface for residents participating in the pilot, with the goal of reducing friction and lowering costs compared to legacy banking rails.
Government agencies will also explore stablecoin-based payment systems for various applications. Local financial institutions will play a role in the transition by investigating tokenization and onchain settlement.
Why Stellar, and why it matters
Stellar was originally designed for low-cost, high-throughput payments with robust cash on- and off-ramp capabilities. The network’s architecture prioritizes moving value between fiat currencies and digital tokens, and its global network of anchors — licensed financial institutions that connect the blockchain to local banking systems — gives Bermuda a ready-made infrastructure for digital asset integration.
Bermuda’s population hovers around 64,000. This isn’t India or Brazil moving onchain. But small jurisdictions often function as regulatory laboratories, and what works in Bermuda gets studied in larger markets.
What this means for investors
The pilot is subject to regulatory approval and phased availability. Bermuda’s ambition to go fully onchain is a multi-year project, not a switch that gets flipped overnight.
Governments experimenting with stablecoin payments at the sovereign level could accelerate regulatory clarity for the broader stablecoin market. Every successful government deployment of stablecoin infrastructure makes it harder for regulators elsewhere to argue that the technology isn’t ready for institutional use.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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