South Korea's central bank is expanding its CBDC deposit token pilot, Project Hangang, with more banks and a new test tied to government spending.
Korea Crypto News
The Bank of Korea is moving its central bank digital currency, or CBDC, project further toward daily use. The bank has added more lenders to its testing program and is preparing a separate trial that uses deposit tokens for government payments.
The pilot is called Project Hangang. It tests bank-issued deposit tokens backed by central bank infrastructure to see whether the system can support government subsidy payments and everyday transfers nationwide.
Deposit Token Pilot Expands to More Banks
The central bank is also paying for outside help to push the project toward commercial use. Its Digital Currency Division commissioned an external consulting service with a budget of 1.7 billion won, or about $1.26 million, to support the second phase of testing.
Government Spending Tests Take Shape
Apart from the bank pilots, South Korea is preparing a separate test for government money. The country's finance ministry is preparing to test blockchain-based payments for selected government expenses as part of a regulatory sandbox exploring distributed ledger technology in public finance.
The pilot will use tokenized deposits to carry out government operational spending, with a full rollout targeted for the fourth quarter of 2026. The first phase will launch in Sejong City and will include conditions such as limits on timing and spending categories. Officials can program the tokens to work only during set hours, such as nine in the morning to six at night, or only within certain industries such as transportation. This feature aims to cut down on misuse of public funds and reduce the need for audits tied to off-hours spending.
The system also seeks to reduce costs. Removing financial intermediaries such as card networks would let merchants skip the commission fee, usually one to three percent, that normally goes to card companies when a customer pays by credit card.
A separate Bank of Korea push has tied deposit tokens to a much larger sum of money. An upcoming test would use deposit tokens to help distribute 110 trillion won, or about $79.4 billion, in government subsidies, according to a report from Yonhap News.
