A 40-year-old Dallas bank has quietly become one of the most important players in U.S. crypto finance. Now it’s going national.
United Texas Bank secured approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to convert from a state-chartered institution to a nationally chartered bank. The approval came on May 15, 2026, with all conditions satisfied by May 27.

The move makes UTB one of the first banks to complete an OCC charter conversion since the Dodd-Frank Act passed 15 years ago.
CEO Scott Beck said the conversion places UTB on equal legal footing with money-center banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America. That means identical federal licensure, full trust powers, and direct access to the Federal Reserve’s wire and ACH systems.
Most crypto companies cannot open accounts at major U.S. banks. UTB has been filling that gap for about five years, processing over $120 billion in crypto transactions annually.
The bank already clears $10 billion a month in dollar volume for foreign banks, OTC desks, and major exchanges. The national charter expands its ability to serve those clients at a federal level.
Beck said the bank operated under a Federal Reserve Consent Order since 2024 related to Bank Secrecy Act compliance. Rather than treating it as a problem, UTB used it to build a proprietary compliance system called UTB Prism Sentinel, which runs real-time blockchain surveillance.
UTB is launching UTB Atomic, an AI-driven real-time payment network built to solve a specific problem. When Silvergate and Signature Bank collapsed, round-the-clock crypto liquidity infrastructure went with them.
Traditional banks close. Crypto markets don’t. That gap creates settlement bottlenecks for institutional traders at 3 a.m.
UTB Atomic enables instant, off-balance-sheet clearing between institutional clients at any hour. Prism Sentinel runs alongside it, continuously monitoring transactions for compliance risks.
Beck said the system is also built to meet upcoming federal rules, including stablecoin frameworks under the GENIUS Act and Clarity Act.
UTB is not alone in this space. Minnesota recently signed a law allowing state banks and credit unions to offer crypto custody services, adding more competition in the sector.
A full digital asset custody and trust department is scheduled to launch at UTB this summer.
Beck described UTB as “a centralized value hub” — still largely unknown nationally, but widely used by crypto firms that have nowhere else to go.
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