South Korea’s internet-only K Bank has entered a strategic partnership with Ripple to test on-chain cross-border remittances. The bank, which counts Upbit operator Dunamu as a major shareholder, wants to see whether Ripple’s blockchain can move money faster and more cheaply than current rails.
The collaboration centers on a multi-phase proof-of-concept rather than a full commercial launch. K Bank is using Ripple’s global network to measure changes in speed, cost, and transparency across selected remittance corridors.
Inside the Ripple-Powered Pilot
In the first phase, K Bank tested a wallet-based remittance model through an app interface, simulating how retail users might send money overseas. The goal was to confirm that funds could move on-chain while the front-end still felt like a normal banking app.
Testing has now moved into a second phase in a virtual environment linked to K Bank’s internal account systems. Engineers are running on-chain transfers between accounts and checking stability for routes that include the United Arab Emirates and Thailand.
K Bank is evaluating Ripple’s Palisade platform, a software-as-a-service wallet solution that meets international security standards. The bank is looking at how Palisade could handle custody, compliance checks, and key management while connecting to Ripple’s payment network.
Local reports say K Bank also plans to use stablecoins in the background for some remittance flows. Customers would still see and send local currencies in the app, but stablecoins and on-chain transfers would move value between countries during the settlement step.
K Bank’s Broader Digital-Asset Strategy
This remittance trial fits into a wider digital-asset roadmap that K Bank has been building over the past year. The lender has filed trademarks for stablecoin wallets and outlined plans for Web3-focused services, including wallet-centric banking tools.
Instead of completely overhauling the current financial infrastructure, K Bank says it favors a “hybrid” strategy that incorporates blockchain. While on-chain transfers and stablecoins operate in the background to reduce expenses and expedite payments, users would continue to use the same mobile banking software.
If the tests succeed and regulators are satisfied, K Bank and Ripple could expand the project into live remittance services. That could help reduce fees and settlement times for transfers from South Korea to markets such as Southeast Asia and the Middle East.
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