The Federal Reserve Board on May 20, 2026 re-opened a long-debated plan to offer a stripped-down “payment account” to financial institutions that don’t fit the traditional bank box — a partial path to Fed payment rails for fintechs, special-purpose state charters, and other novel-charter applicants that have spent years stuck in the Tier 3 queue for full master accounts.
The proposal, published in the Federal Register on May 26, opens a 60-day comment window. While the rule is pending, Reserve Banks have been “encouraged” to pause decisions on Tier 3 master-account access requests, freezing one of the most contested choke points in the U.S. payments system.
What the “payment account” is — and isn’t
A payment account, as currently drafted, would let an eligible institution clear and settle payments through a Reserve Bank without the full set of privileges that come with a master account. According to the May 20 press release, holders:
- Would not have access to intraday credit.
- Would not have access to the discount window.
- Would not earn interest on balances held at a Reserve Bank.
- Would face closing balance limits “based on an institution’s expected payment activity,” with automated controls to prevent overdrafts.
- Would be required to mitigate illicit-finance risks at the account-holder level.
In other words, the account is engineered to deliver clearing and settlement utility while denying applicants the two features that turn a Fed account into a profit center: interest on reserves and emergency liquidity from the discount window.
Eligibility is technically broad. The Board’s release states the account would be available to “legally eligible financial institutions,” including those that are not federally insured — language aimed squarely at state-chartered special-purpose banks and other charters that operate outside the FDIC perimeter.
The Tier 3 backdrop
The proposal lands on top of the Fed’s 2022 Account Access Guidelines, which created a tiered framework for how Reserve Banks evaluate access requests. The original release described a streamlined review for federally insured institutions, an intermediate review for non-insured institutions subject to federal prudential supervision, and a more “extensive” review for institutions with novel charters where regulatory frameworks are still developing. Those three buckets have hardened into market shorthand as Tier 1, Tier 2, and Tier 3.
| Tier | Who it covers | Level of review |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Federally insured depository institutions | Streamlined |
| 2 | Non-insured but subject to federal prudential supervision (e.g., uninsured branches of foreign banking organizations) | Intermediate |
| 3 | Novel-charter institutions — typically state-chartered, without federal deposit insurance and without a federal prudential regulator | Most extensive |
Tier 3 is where the friction lives. Special-purpose charters — many of them oriented toward digital-asset custody, tokenized deposits, and instant payments — have applied for master accounts and been left to age. Custodia Bank, the Wyoming special-purpose depository institution founded by Caitlin Long, became the test case after the Fed denied its master-account request in early 2023; Custodia subsequently lost its challenge in federal court. To date, no Tier 3 master account has been approved, and the new payment-account proposal effectively concedes that a different product — not a different decision on the same product — is the way forward.
How a payment account compares to a full master account
Why now — and what’s frozen
A version of the payment account first surfaced in 2023 but went dormant. The May 20 release notes that “the maximum closing balance was increased” in this draft relative to the earlier proposal — a marginal but meaningful concession to applicants who argued the original caps were too low to make the account economically usable for any real payment business.
The bigger near-term consequence is the pause. With the Board “encouraging” Reserve Banks to hold off on Tier 3 access decisions until policy development concludes, no novel-charter institution will receive a full master-account approval — or a clean denial — for at least the duration of the comment period and likely longer. Comments are due roughly 60 days after the May 26 Federal Register publication, putting the deadline in late July.
The proposal also lands less than two weeks after Kevin Warsh was sworn in as Fed chair on May 22, with the Federal Open Market Committee unanimously selecting him as its chairman the same day. Warsh’s chairmanship runs through May 21, 2030. Whether the payment-account framework survives intact under the new chair is one of the first procedural tests of how the Warsh-era Fed will treat the access fight.
Why capital markets should care
The Fed’s master-account list is a small, slow-moving database; access changes can take years and rarely make the front page. But the choke point matters. Stablecoin issuers, tokenized-deposit projects, and narrow-bank concepts all depend, at some point, on a direct or indirect relationship with the Fed’s payment rails. A workable payment-account framework would create a regulated, lower-risk lane for those flows; an unworkable one would push them further into correspondent relationships with chartered banks — and the embedded credit risk and fees that go with them.
For now, the practical takeaway for institutional readers is narrow. Tier 3 applicants are on ice. Comments close in late July. And the rule that emerges will decide who gets to plug directly into the largest payment system on earth — and on what terms.
Disclosure: This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed before publication. It is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.
Sources
- Federal Reserve Board press release, May 20, 2026 — “Federal Reserve Board seeks comments on a proposal to establish a ‘payment account’ for eligible financial institutions.”
- Federal Reserve Board press release, Aug. 15, 2022 — Final Account Access Guidelines.
- Federal Reserve Board press release, May 22, 2026 — Kevin Warsh takes oath as chairman.