OCC Interpretive Letter 1186 Bank Crypto-Asset Network Fees is a United States banking-law guidance profile for OCC Interpretive Letter No. 1186, issued by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on November 18, 2025. The letter confirms, based on the requesting bank’s facts and qualifications, that a national bank may pay blockchain network fees, sometimes called gas fees, to facilitate otherwise permissible crypto-asset activities and may hold necessary crypto-assets as principal for reasonably foreseeable network-fee needs. The OCC also confirms that a national bank may hold crypto-assets as principal for testing otherwise permissible crypto-asset-related platforms.
What OCC Interpretive Letter 1186 covers
The letter focuses on transaction fees charged by distributed ledger technology networks. The OCC explains that some blockchain networks require users to pay a network fee to incentivize nodes to validate transactions and add them to the blockchain. It also notes that fees may be dynamically calculated and may have to be paid in the network’s native crypto-asset, even where a transaction involves another token on that network.
This matters for bank crypto-asset services because a bank providing custody, transfer, settlement, or related services may need to complete on-chain transactions. The OCC’s analysis treats paying network fees, and holding limited crypto-assets to pay those fees, as incidental to otherwise permissible banking activity where the bank has a reasonably foreseeable need.
Key provisions for bank crypto-asset network fees
- Network-fee payments: A national bank may pay network fees on blockchain networks to facilitate otherwise permissible activity.
- Principal holdings for gas fees: A bank may hold crypto-assets on balance sheet, as principal, when necessary to pay network fees for which it anticipates a reasonably foreseeable need.
- Platform testing: A bank may hold crypto-assets as principal to test otherwise permissible crypto-asset-related platforms, whether internally developed or acquired from a third party.
- Operating subsidiaries: The OCC states that the permissibility analysis applies equally to national banks and their operating subsidiaries.
- Risk controls: The letter relies on the bank’s representations that it will conduct risk and compliance assessments and address operational, market, liquidity, and compliance risks.
Jurisdictional impact in the United States
For U.S. crypto law coverage, Interpretive Letter 1186 is important because it narrows a practical operational question for OCC-regulated banks: whether a bank can hold native crypto-assets needed to pay on-chain transaction fees without treating those holdings as a standalone speculative crypto position. The OCC’s analysis emphasizes customer facilitation, operational efficiency, and incidental banking powers under the National Bank Act rather than creating a broad investment authority.
The letter is not a statute and does not replace other legal regimes. It responds to the facts of a specific request and states that it does not address whether other activities related to holding crypto-assets as principal are part of the business of banking. It also states that the OCC will examine the activities described in the letter through its ongoing supervisory process.
Status and timeline
| Date | Event | Status |
|---|---|---|
| March 7, 2025 | OCC issued Interpretive Letter 1183 and rescinded the prior IL 1179 supervisory non-objection framework for certain crypto-asset activities. | Published |
| May 7, 2025 | OCC issued Interpretive Letter 1184 on crypto-asset custody and execution services. | Published |
| November 18, 2025 | OCC issued Interpretive Letter 1186 on paying network fees and holding crypto-assets for network fees and platform testing. | Published |
| February 25, 2026 | OCC’s GENIUS Act proposed rule cited IL 1186 when discussing non-payment stablecoin crypto-assets used to pay network or gas fees. | Proposed rule context |
As of June 4, 2026, this profile should treat OCC Interpretive Letter 1186 as published OCC interpretive guidance, not enacted legislation. Later OCC materials continued to cite IL 1186 in applying bank digital-asset activity analysis, including a May 2026 corporate decision discussing on-balance-sheet digital assets for gas-fee needs.


